US regulators signal stronger risk, tax oversight for cryptocurrencies, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


WASHINGTON: US Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell turned up the heat on cryptocurrencies on Thursday, saying they pose risks to financial stability, and indicating that greater regulation of the increasingly popular electronic currency may be warranted.

The Treasury Department, meanwhile, flagged its concerns that wealthy individuals could use the largely unregulated sector to avoid tax and said it wanted big crypto asset transfers reported to authorities.

The back-to-back announcements came in a week when Bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurrency, took a wild ride, falling as much as 30% on Wednesday after China announced new curbs on the sector, underscoring the volatility of the sector.

Powell underlined cryptocurrency risks in an unusual video message that also laid out a clearer timetable as the Fed explores the possibility of adopting a digital currency of its own.

While highlighting the potential benefits of advances in financial technology, Powell said cryptocurrencies, stablecoins and other innovations “may also carry potential risks to those users and to the broader financial system.”

As the technology advanced, “so must our attention to the appropriate regulatory and oversight framework. This includes paying attention to private-sector payments innovators who are currently not within the traditional regulatory arrangements applied to banks, investment firms, and other financial intermediaries.”

Powell’s comments signaled how seriously the Fed has been forced to reckon with the surge in popularity and market values of non-traditional currency options such as Bitcoin, especially as it looks at developing a digital version of the U.S. dollar, the world’s reserve currency.

Speculative Assets
The Fed and Treasury consider cryptocurrencies, which now have a market capitalization of about $2 trillion, to be more like art, gold or other highly speculative assets.

A central bank digital currency, though, offers whoever holds it – a person, a business, even another government – a direct claim on that central bank, which is exactly what holding a paper dollar bill does now.

Powell said the Fed would release a discussion paper this summer on digital payments, with a focus on the benefits and risks of establishing a central bank digital currency, and will also seek public comment.

He noted that “to date, cryptocurrencies have not served as a convenient way to make payments, given, among other factors, their swings in value.”

The Treasury also flagged cryptocurrency risks, including opportunities for wealthy individuals to move taxable assets into the largely unregulated crypto sector.

“Cryptocurrency already poses a significant detection problem by facilitating illegal activity broadly including tax evasion,” the Treasury said.

Its proposal, disclosed as part of a policy report https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/The-American-Families-Plan-Tax-Compliance-Agenda.pdf detailing the Biden administration’s $80 billion IRS enforcement proposal to boost revenue collection, would provide additional resources for the IRS to address crypto assets,

In addition to the reports of $10,000-plus cryptocurrency transfers that would parallel bank reports of similarly sized cash transfers, the Treasury also proposed that crypto asset exchanges and custodians also report transactions to the IRS related to bank interest, dividend and brokerage transactions.

The reporting requirements, depending on how they are structured, could also allow the government to gain insight about US companies that are extorted to pay hackers ransoms, almost invariably in cryptocurrency, to regain control of their IT systems.

Law enforcement and private sector cybersecurity experts alike have complained that a lack of transparency around these ransomware incidents contributes to their continued occurrence.

The Treasury disclosure took the wind out of a rally in the dollar value of Bitcoin on Thursday that followed steep plunges for Bitcoin and etherium on Wednesday. Bitcoin was up 8.7% in afternoon trade after an earlier gain of 10%.

While the Fed and some other developed economies are still conducting research on what a central bank digital currency would look like, China is moving ahead at a fast clip and is currently piloting a digital version of the yuan, with plans to ramp up usage before the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.

Powell said last month that the Fed would not rush its efforts in response to China’s more aggressive pace, noting that the approach taken there would not work in the United States.

“It is far more important to get it right than it is to do it fast,” Powell said after the April policy setting meeting.

The Boston Fed is currently working with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to research the technology that could be used for a central bank digital currency and will be releasing those findings in the third quarter.

Congressional action would be required before a digital currency could be developed.

Also on Thursday, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler said he would like to see more regulation around cryptocurrency exchanges, including those that solely trade bitcoin and do not currently have to register with his agency.

“This is a quite volatile, one might say highly volatile, asset class, and the investing public would benefit from more investor protection on the crypto exchanges,” he said at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s annual conference.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Fed’s Rosengren says important to understand trade-offs of digital currencies, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Federal Reserve is exploring the technology that would be required to establish a central bank digital currency, but more research needs to be done before it would move forward with a currency, Boston Fed Bank President Eric Rosengren said on Wednesday.

“It is important to highlight that this is exploratory work, and any decision to move forward with such a currency would depend on a variety of factors beyond the technological feasibility and implementation,” Rosengren said in remarks prepared for a virtual event organized by Harvard Law School.

A central bank digital currency could improve financial inclusion, reduce the cost of cross-border financial transactions and provide more flexibility for implementing monetary policy, he said.

But Fed officials would need to fully consider the policy implications and trade-offs that come with using a digital currency, including possible threats to financial stability, Rosengren said.

“It is important to highlight that this is exploratory work, and any decision to move forward with such a currency would depend on a variety of factors beyond the technological feasibility and implementation,” Rosengren said

They plan to release a white paper and open source code early in the third quarter of this year, and later phases of the research project will focus on privacy, anti-money laundering and other issues.

“It is important to understand what problems a central bank digital currency is being designed to solve, and whether other technologies could more cheaply or efficiently address those problems,” Rosengren said.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Digital Dollar Project to launch five U.S. central bank digital currency pilots, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


By Michelle Price

WASHINGTON – The U.S. nonprofit Digital Dollar Project said on Monday it will launch five pilot programs over the next 12 months to test the potential uses of a U.S. central bank digital currency, the first effort of its kind in the United States.

The private-sector pilots initially will be funded by Accenture Plc and involve financial firms, retailers and NGOs, among others. The aim is to generate data that could help U.S. policymakers develop a digital dollar.

A partnership between Accenture and the Digital Dollar Foundation, the Digital Dollar Project was created last year to promote research into a U.S. central bank digital currency (CBDC).

“There are conferences and papers coming out every week around the world on CBDCs based on data from other countries,” said Christopher Giancarlo, former chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and co-founder of the Digital Dollar Foundation.

“What there is not, is any real data and testing from the United States to inform that debate. We’re seeking to generate that real-world data,” Giancarlo added.

CBDCs are the digital equivalent of banknotes and coins, giving holders a direct digital claim on the central bank and allowing them to make instant electronic payments.

While debit cards or payment apps are a form of digital cash, those transactions are created by commercial banks based on money central banks credit to those banks’ accounts. They are not fully government-backed, can take days to settle, and often incur fees. Cryptocurrencies, meanwhile, are controlled by private actors.

Central banks around the world, including in China and Europe, are revving up CBDC projects to fend off threats from cryptocurrencies and improve payment systems.

As guardian of the world’s most widely used currency, the U.S. Federal Reserve is moving more cautiously. It is working with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to build a technology platform for a hypothetical digital dollar, but chair Jerome Powell said last week that it is “far more important” to get a digital dollar right than it is to be fast.

Giancarlo said Powell was correct to be cautious but that as China pushes ahead, the United States must drive a discussion on incorporating U.S. values such as privacy and freedom of commerce and speech into the development of CBDCs.

“It’s vital that the U.S. asserts leadership as it has in previous technological innovations,” Giancarlo added.

A digital dollar could also boost financial inclusion in the United States, where transaction fees impede the access of many Americans to mainstream financial services, Giancarlo said.

The pilot programs, three of which will launch in the next two months, will complement the Fed’s MIT project by generating data on the functional, sociological, business uses, benefits and other facets, of a digital dollar. The data is due to be released publicly.

Accenture has worked on a number of CBDC projects including in Canada, Singapore and France.

David Treat, a senior managing director at Accenture, said CBDCs would exist alongside other forms of physical and electronic money, rather than replace them.

“It’s not a panacea for all money,” Treat said. “We will be using physical cash and coin for some time.”



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Central bank e-cash could ‘challenge’ role of big banks, Bank of France says, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Central bank digital cash could give new types of businesses access to ultra-cheap central bank funding and lessen the role of big banks in settling large transfers, a senior Bank of France official said on Thursday.

With high stakes involved in the development of e-cash, the Bank of France is part of the European Central Bank’s research into how a future digital euro could be used both in wholesale bank-to-bank lending and in everyday retail banking.

A wholesale central bank digital currency could spark demand from financial firms which don’t currently have access to central bank money, Denis Beau, deputy governor of the Bank of France, told an online seminar organised by the OMFIF think-tank.

“Even if these actors would be … subject to similar regulatory requirements, the role of large banks in the settlement of transfer orders in central bank money would be challenged,” Beau said.

The world’s biggest central banks, including the ECB, are revving up work on issuing digital cash, aiming to use its flexibility to improve payment systems, ease some of the complexities of negative interest rates and ensure they don’t cede too much control to digital currencies.

The scope and scale of the central bank digital currency research varies from country to country.

The People’s Bank of China is in the advanced stages of testing a digital yuan that would be used by both individuals and businesses. The Bahamas has a fully working digital ‘Sand Dollar’ while Switzerland has successfully tested large-scale bank-to-bank digital currency transactions.

Meanwhile, U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Wednesday that China’s digital yuan plans would not push the Fed to rush its own digital dollar plans.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

US dollar rises as caution reigns ahead of key central bank meetings, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


NEW YORK: The dollar gained for a third straight session on Monday, as traders cut their bearish bets on the greenback to four-month lows amid the recent rise in US Treasury yields and grew cautious ahead of key global central bank meetings.

The Federal Reserve, Bank of England, and Bank of Japan are all set to meet this week and will likely set the tone as to where global rates are headed.

US Treasury yields, however, were lower on Monday in line with Europe, ahead of these central bank gatherings. Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields traded as high at 1.639% on Monday, close to Friday’s top of 1.6420%, a level last seen in February 2020.

Gains in the greenback were more pronounced against low-yielding currencies such as the euro and the British pound while high-yielding currencies like the Australian dollar fared relatively better.

“The US dollar has been one of the best-performing G10 currencies in recent weeks reflecting a shift in expectations regarding Fed interest rate policy,” said Jane Foley, senior FX strategist, at Rabobank in a research note.

“Since the reflation trade is centered around US fiscal policy and growth expectations, the US dollar could prove to be more resilient than the consensus had been expecting at the start of the year.”

Rising US yields have lifted the greenback 2% so far this year thanks to widening interest rate differentials relative to other major bond markets. The dollar declined more than 4% in the last quarter of 2020.

In mid-morning trading, the dollar index, which tracks the US currency against six major peers, was up 0.2% at 91.68 . It hit a late November 2020 high of 92.51 last week.

The US currency has been supported by declining bets for its decline, with speculators cutting net short positions to the lowest since mid-November in the week ended March 9.

Rising bond yields will continue to focus minds this week before a Fed meeting at which some analysts expect policymakers to strike an optimistic tone on the US economy.

While there are some expectations that the Fed might try to calm bond markets – yields have risen some 60 basis points since the last Fed meeting – the consensus view is Fed Chief Jerome Powell will not make changes to policy.

“The Fed is not expected to tinker with its monetary policy but instead communicate via forecasts that the situation is under control and that markets are running way ahead of themselves,” SEB analysts said in a note.

The greenback rose 0.2% against the yen to 109.19, after earlier climbing to 109.36 yen, the highest since June 2020.

The euro weakened 0.3% to $1.1920 after rising last week for the first time in three weeks as latest data showed hedge funds slashed their net euro positions.

The Australian dollar – viewed widely as a liquid proxy for risk appetite – fell 0.4% to US$0.7725, extending Friday’s Loss.

Bitcoin, meanwhile, weakened 3.3% after surging to a record high of $61,781.83 over the weekend.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Safe-haven dollar softens as risk sentiment recovers, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


TOKYO: The dollar remained on the back foot on Friday as an improvement in risk appetite sapped demand for the safest assets, with investors taking cheer from U.S. economic data wasn’t as bad as feared.

Wall Street also provided a lift to sentiment, as stocks rebounded after earnings season got off to a strong start and concerns eased around hedge funds selling long positions to cover shorts.

The dollar index was little changed at 90.566 early in the Asian day, after slipping 0.1% overnight.

The gauge is still on track for a 0.4% weekly advance following safety buying at the start of the week amid concerns that President Joe Biden’s fiscal spending package will not be as large as the proposed $1.9 trillion.

However, many analysts expect the dollar to return to the downward trend that saw it lose nearly 7% of its value last year, particularly with the Federal Reserve committed to ultra-easy monetary policy.

“Wide expectations of that huge issuance that’s coming and the support of the Fed mean that we’re looking in the medium-term for further U.S. dollar weakness,” said Michael McCarthy, chief strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney.

“The flipside of the reversal in risk appetite is we’re seeing good support for commodity currencies,” like the Australian dollar, he added.

The Aussie was about flat at 76.75 U.S. cents after rising 0.2% overnight.

The euro was little changed at $1.21175 after edging higher in the previous session.

The dollar advanced 0.1% to 104.335 yen, another traditional safe haven, adding to the previous day’s gains of about 0.2%.

Bitcoin continued to edge higher, trading at $33,899, after surging more than 10% on Thursday.

The world’s most popular cryptocurrency has been consolidating since touching a record high of $42,000 earlier this month.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 2