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Basel Study Shows World’s Largest Banks Are Exposed to $9 Billion in Crypto Assets

Basel Study Shows World’s Largest Banks Are Exposed to  Billion in Crypto AssetsA first-of-its-kind study published by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision details that the world’s largest financial institutions are exposed to roughly €9.4 billion (US$9 billion) in crypto assets. The research paper authored by the Basel Committee’s secretariat Renzo Corrias further explains that out of all the banks’ total risk exposure, cryptocurrency exposure is estimated […]

From Ethereum’s Debut to the Future of Web3: The Legacy of WAGMI

Crypto’s Richest Billionaire Says Banks Should Be More Involved With Digital Asset Industry

Crypto’s Richest Billionaire Says Banks Should Be More Involved With Digital Asset Industry

The CEO of the world’s largest crypto exchange platform is advocating for banks to play a larger role in the development of digital assets. Binance chief executive officer Changpeng Zhao says banks serve an important function in the crypto ecosystem despite the rivalry that has raged between the two financial sectors for over a decade. […]

The post Crypto’s Richest Billionaire Says Banks Should Be More Involved With Digital Asset Industry appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

From Ethereum’s Debut to the Future of Web3: The Legacy of WAGMI

Basel Committee wants to limit banks’ digital asset exposure to just 1% of equity

Volatile cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin would also be subjected to a 1,250% risk premium.

On Thursday, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision suggested during its second consultation on the prudential treatment of crypto-asset exposures that banks limit their exposure to so-called Group 2 crypto assets to just 1% of their Tier 1 capital. 

Group 1 digital assets consist of tokenized traditional assets, such as synthetic stocks, or those with effective stabilization mechanisms, such as regulated stablecoins. Under the new proposal, Group 1 digital assets would be subject to at least equivalent risk-based capital requirements as traditional capital assets within the current capital framework, Basel III.

However, cryptocurrencies that do not meet the above requirements will be classified as Group 2 digital assets, which would theoretically include major non-stablecoin, non-tokenized cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC) and most altcoins. Therefore, banks would only be able to commit 1% of their total equity or net asset value in either long or short positions toward Group 2 digital assets.

Related: Bank of England and regulators assess crypto regulation in raft of new reports

Moreover, the Basel Committee is considering banks adopting a 1,250% risk premium for Group 2 digital assets. In comparison, stocks typically have a 20% to 150% risk premium attached to their nominal values, depending on the company's credit rating. Under Basel III, a bank's risk-weighted assets must not surpass 10.5% of its Tier 1 capital for prudent leverage.

The move would likely severely constrain banks' ability to purchase volatile cryptocurrency in the future as, for the sake of argument, a bank would need to add $125 million worth of risk-weighted assets to its portfolio for every $10 million in Bitcoin purchased, making them far less lucrative than assets with less risk-weighting premiums. Basel III is an international regulatory accord that nearly all financial institutions in developed countries must abide by and is enforced by law.

From Ethereum’s Debut to the Future of Web3: The Legacy of WAGMI