Compliance
New Liechtenstein-Based Bank Starts Up
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The European principality is home to a new bank with a focus on digital assets – added to more traditional banking capabilities.
Celsion Bank,
which is licensed in Liechtenstein, has started operating, it
announced last Friday.
The firm, which is authorised under European Union crypto-assets
regulations, aka MiCAR, can serve clients across the EU and the
European Economic Area, Switzerland and other jurisdictions
subject to applicable legal and regulatory
requirements.
Celsion combines digital asset capabilities with traditional
banking infrastructure within a single, integrated framework. The
bank focuses on clients active in digital assets, including
companies, asset managers, foundations, and other corporates with
digital asset exposure, it said in a statement.
The organisation is led by CEO Dr Markus Federspiel, alongside
Mauro Casellini (chief growth officer), Holger Schultes (chief
operating officer), Harald Siegel (chief financial officer) and
Kevin Pekar (chief risk officer).
“Clients active in digital assets require a banking setup where
trading, custody and payments operate seamlessly together. That
is the infrastructure Celsion provides,” Lee Weiss, chairman of
the board of directors, said.
Dr Federspiel added: “We are not simply building another bank but
shaping a model that enables the long-term integration of
traditional banking and digital assets within a fully-regulated
environment.”
The bank is licensed by the Liechtenstein Financial Market
Authority (FMA). Enacted in 2020, Liechtenstein has the The
Law on Tokens and TT Service Providers (aka TVTG or the
Blockchain-Act), a framework for regulating the token economy.
Left to right: Kevin Pekar (CRO), Mauro Casellini (CGO), Dr Markus Federspiel (CEO), Holger Schultes (COO), Harald Siegel (CFO).