Compliance
Switzerland Clarifies Position On Booming ICO Market

The Alpine State's primary financial regulator has weighed in on the growing initial coin offering (ICO) market, offering guidance to blockchain start-ups looking to raise funds.
Switzerland’s financial watchdog has outlined how it will bring
initial coin offerings (ICOs) in line with existing regulations,
as the fundraisers popular among crypto start-ups gather
pace.
FINMA has witnessed a
“sharp increase” in the number of ICOs planned or carried out in
Switzerland, it said, along with a corresponding rise in
enquiries about how regulations apply.
In its new guidance, the regulator has said that financial market
law and regulation is “not applicable to all ICOs”, and that
“circumstances must be considered on a case-by-case basis” as
“there is no ICO-specific regulation, nor is there relevant case
law”.
ICOs are a meld of crowdfunding and an initial public offering
(IPO) used by blockchain companies to raise funds. Instead of
shares in a company, investors in ICOs are rewarded with a new
crypto-currency or digital token whose value is tied directly to
the issuing company’s performance. It is for this reason some
regulators, such as the US Securities and Exchange Commission,
have suggested ICOs should be subject to securities
regulation.
In assessing ICOs, FINMA will examine the economic function and
purpose of the digital tokens issued by an ICO organiser. The key
factors are the underlying purpose of the tokens and whether they
are already tradeable or transferable, FINMA added.
The regulator’s analysis suggests that money laundering and
securities regulation are most relevant to ICOs.
“Money laundering risks are especially high in a decentralised
blockchain-based system, in which assets can be transferred
anonymously and without any regulated intermediaries,” FINMA
said, while “securities regulation is intended to ensure that
market participants can base their decisions about investments on
a reliable minimum set of information.”
Source: Coinist
FINMA categorised digital tokens into three segments: payment
tokens, utility tokens and asset tokens.
Payment tokens are “synonymous with crypto-currencies and have no
further functions or links to development projects,” it said,
noting that in some cases they may be “accepted as a means of
payment” in time.
Utility tokens are intended to provide digital access to an
application or service.
Asset tokens “represent assets such as participations in real
physical underlyings, companies, or earnings streams, or an
entitlement to dividends or interest payments,” FINMA said.
Regarding economic functions, they are “analogous to equities,
bonds or derivatives”.
Based on this criteria, FINMA said it will handle ICO enquiries
as follows:
“Payment ICOs: For ICOs where the token is intended to function
as a means of payment and can already be transferred, FINMA will
require compliance with anti-money laundering regulations. FINMA
will not, however, treat such tokens as securities.
“Utility ICOs: These tokens do not qualify as securities only if
their sole purpose is to confer digital access rights to an
application or service and if the utility token can already be
used in this way at the point of issue. If a utility token
functions solely or partially as an investment in economic terms,
FINMA will treat such tokens as securities (i.e. in the same way
as asset tokens).
“Asset ICOs: FINMA regards asset tokens as securities, which
means that there are securities law requirements for trading in
such tokens, as well as civil law requirements under the Swiss
Code of Obligations (e.g. prospectus requirements).”