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Japan preparing amendment to enforce FATF travel rules on crypto by May 2023: Report

Meeting international Anti-Money Laundering standards is the latest in a series of measures Japan has taken in recent months to improve its cryptocurrency regulation.

Japan is expected to enact new rules on money transfers to prevent the use of crypto for money laundering, according to local news agency Nikkei. The changes will bring Japan up-to-date with Financial Action Task Force (FATF) recommendations.

An amendment to the Act on Prevention of Transfer of Criminal Proceeds will be introduced in the National Diet on Oct. 3 that will add crypto to the so-called travel rules on money transfers, Nikkei reported. The rules will be amended to require exchange operators to collect customer information in transactions involving cryptocurrency and stablecoins — as they already do for cash transactions.

The Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Act and the International Terrorist Asset-Freezing Act will be updated to reflect the same changes, which will go into effect in May 2023. The amendment foresees the issuance of “administrative guidance and corrective orders” to exchanges that break the new rules, with criminal penalties for violations of thecorrective orders.

The amendment will incorporate into Japanese law recommendations the FATF introduced in 2019 and updated in 2021 for virtual asset service providers. The FATF is an intergovernmental money laundering and terrorist financing watchdog. The agency has had limited success with the adoption of its Travel Rule. According to a report released in April, hardly more than half of the countries surveyed by the FATF had adequate Combating the Financing of Terrorism (CFT) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) laws and regulations.

Related: After four years, Japan brings back its first crypto ATM

Japan has taken important steps to regulate crypto in recent months. The parliament passed a law to limit the issuance of stablecoins by non-bank institutions in June. In July, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry opened a Web3 Policy Office to foster the Web3 business environment. In addition, there are reports that the Financial Services Agency, the Japanese tax authority, is considering easing the punishing capital gains rates on crypto assets after extensive outcry within the industry.

SEC Reports Record $8.2B in Remedies With 583 Enforcement Actions in 2024

Financial Superintendence of Colombia Presents Project to Regulate Crypto Service Providers

Financial Superintendence of Colombia Presents Project to Regulate Crypto Service ProvidersThe Financial Superintendence of Colombia presented a project that seeks to bring clarity to how links between banks and virtual asset service providers (VASPs) will be handled in the future. The document defines certain key concepts and determines a set of prerequisites that banks need to verify before accepting virtual asset service providers as customers. […]

SEC Reports Record $8.2B in Remedies With 583 Enforcement Actions in 2024

Privacy Coins, Mixers and Anonymity To Be Slowly Eliminated From Crypto by Upcoming Regulations: Coin Bureau

Privacy Coins, Mixers and Anonymity To Be Slowly Eliminated From Crypto by Upcoming Regulations: Coin Bureau

A popular analyst known for his deep-dive research is weighing in on what the next round of regulations might mean for the crypto industry. In a YouTube update, pseudonymous Coin Bureau host Guy tells his 2.08 million subscribers about the latest policy update from international anti-money laundering (AML) organization the Financial Action Task Force (FATF). […]

The post Privacy Coins, Mixers and Anonymity To Be Slowly Eliminated From Crypto by Upcoming Regulations: Coin Bureau appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

SEC Reports Record $8.2B in Remedies With 583 Enforcement Actions in 2024

Dutch bank ING sells digital asset tool Pyctor to GMEX

GMEX has acquired ING’s Pyctor business to connect CeFi and Defi amid the increasing demand for hybrid finance.

ING Group, Dutch multinational banking and financial services corporation, has spun out its digital asset business Pyctor to multi-asset trading infrastructure firm GMEX.

GMEX has acquired ING’s institutional-grade digital asset custody solution Pyctor in a multi-million dollar deal, the companies said in a joint announcement on Monday.

The Pyctor offering compliments GMEX’s MultiHub service, an institutional cross-platform business launched last year with the mission to bridge the gap between centralized finance (CeFi) and decentralized finance (DeFi), GMEX CEO Hirander Misra told Cointelegraph.

Pyctor expands MultiHub with a number of digital asset-focused capabilities, including smart contract features, post-trade custodial and institutional network capabilities like fragmentation of private keys.

Pyctor is also designed to support regulatory compliance, including a major Anti-Money Laundering framework by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) referred to as the Travel Rule

“There is a market need for this type of offering built by a bank for banks, asset managers and corporate clients, which can now operate in a neutral environment for institutional participants,” Misra said. Institutions are increasingly seeking to expand their capabilities into digital assets trading and settlement in a way that is interoperable with existing CeFi systems and asset classes, the CEO added, stating:

“This calls for the need for hybrid finance, or HyFi, which delivers a hybrid digital market infrastructure solution with interoperability of multiple blockchains and API integration into traditional systems to ensure a cohesive approach.”

ING started Pyctor as a project incubated out of its innovation arm ING Labs in Amsterdam in 2018. Pyctor’s technology manages private keys by fragmenting and distributing them among blockchain nodes hosted by regulated institutions. 

ING completed Pyctor’s first proof of concept in 2019 and then formed a working group for sandbox trials, including participation from major global banks and firms like BNP Paribas, Citi, ABN AMRO, Societe Generale, Invesco, UBS, State Street, Forge and others.

Related: JPMorgan trials blockchain for collateral settlement in after-hours trading

As previously reported by Cointelegraph, ING has been working on proprietary cryptocurrency custody technology tools since at least 2019 alongside many other blockchain-related activities. In 2021, ING conducted a trial of a DeFi peer-to-peer lending protocol with the Netherlands Authority for the Financial Markets.

SEC Reports Record $8.2B in Remedies With 583 Enforcement Actions in 2024

Reporting ‘limited progress,’ FATF urges countries to introduce legislation for travel rule

“Countries that have not introduced Travel Rule legislation should do so as soon as possible, and FATF jurisdictions should lead by example," said the organization.

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) reported that 11 out of 98 responding jurisdictions have started enforcing its standards on Combating the Financing of Terrorism, or CFT, and Anti-Money Laundering, or AML.

In an update released Thursday on the “Implementation of the FATF Standards on Virtual Assets and Virtual Asset Service Providers,” the FATF reported the “vast majority” of jurisdictions assessed by the organization’s Global Network since June 2021 “still require major or moderate improvement” in AML/CFT compliance in accordance with the travel rule. According to the FATF, countries moving towards implementing these requirements made “limited progress” over the last year, with 29 out of 98 responding jurisdictions reporting passing legislation related to the travel rule, and 11 starting enforcement.

“While around a quarter of responding jurisdictions are now in the process of passing the relevant legislation, around one-third (36 out of 98) have not yet started introducing the Travel Rule,” said the FATF. “This gap leaves VAs and VASPs vulnerable to misuse, and demonstrates the urgent need for jurisdictions to accelerate implementation and enforcement.”

The organization added that companies in the private sector had made progress in introducing solutions to support compliance with the travel rule and “taking early steps to ensure interoperability with other solutions.” However, the FATF hinted at the necessity of implementing these solutions quickly, given the “significant threat of ransomware actors misusing VAs to facilitate payments” and funneling illicit funds through Virtual Asset Service Providers, also known as VASPs.

“Countries that have not introduced Travel Rule legislation should do so as soon as possible, and FATF jurisdictions should lead by example by promoting implementation, and by sharing experiences and good practices [...] Rapid implementation by jurisdictions will incentivize progress further.”

Related: President of Panama shoots down crypto bill citing FATF guidelines

Among other developments since 2021 included a rise in the growth of decentralized finance, or DeFi, and nonfungible projects, which the FATF labeled as a “challenging area for implementation” of the travel rule. The organization cited a Chainalysis report released in February that “suggests that threats from criminal misuse continue” with illicit transactions in DeFi, and reached similar conclusions for NFTs potentially being used for “money laundering and wash trading.”

Under FATF guidelines, VASPs operating within certain jurisdictions need to be licensed or registered. The organization reported in an April update that roughly half of assessed jurisdictions in 120 countries had “adequate laws and regulatory structures in place” to assess risks and verify beneficial owners of companies, urging them to prioritize identifying and reporting information on cryptocurrency transactions.

SEC Reports Record $8.2B in Remedies With 583 Enforcement Actions in 2024

President of Panama Partially Vetoes Crypto Law Passed by National Assembly

President of Panama Partially Vetoes Crypto Law Passed by National AssemblyLaurentino Cortizo, president of Panama, has exercised his veto powers to make a series of objections to the recently approved cryptocurrency law. The observations of the president only touch on certain articles and do not affect the law in its entire scope. However, these articles of the bill will have to be re-discussed, taking into […]

SEC Reports Record $8.2B in Remedies With 583 Enforcement Actions in 2024

Venezuelan Sunacrip Tightens Control on Transactions Made Using Unauthorized Exchanges

Venezuelan Sunacrip Tightens Control on Transactions Made Using Unauthorized ExchangesSunacrip, the Venezuelan cryptocurrency watchdog, has issued a new internal providence that defines the guidelines it will follow in dealing with reports of suspicious activity related to fintech platforms. The document describes that the use of unauthorized platforms might constitute a suspicious activity, which could ostensibly lead to penalties of $15,000 for its customers. Sunacrip […]

SEC Reports Record $8.2B in Remedies With 583 Enforcement Actions in 2024

Solving the ‘Sunrise Issue’ is the key to unlocking crypto mass adoption

Regulation will touch every person in every jurisdiction worldwide; crypto must find ways to preserve its decentralization and privacy.

We have all been there. You see something, hear something, or feel something, and want to share that feeling or observation with someone else. Do you pick up the phone? Send over a text? Record a voice note?

Humans thrive in our shared experiences: a captivating concert, the winning goal of a sports match, waking up to watch the sunrise. There's something fulfilling about having an experience and being able to share it with someone in real time. And due to technology, we can do that, even if another person, call them our counterpart, is halfway across the world.

So why wouldn't we expect the same level of seamless communication and collaboration across an industry built around that very idea — total interconnectivity and a global reach? Crypto was built to democratize access to finance, community and technology. And yet, in the current regulatory climate, as government agencies tighten their grasp on how customers transact via the Coinbases and Binances of the world, we are experiencing growing delays amid rapidly expanding sanctions that are causing a major break into crypto's connectivity.

As a result, crypto exchanges are experiencing a detrimental roadblock when attempting to comply (and process compliant transactions between each other) amid global regulation. What's holding our industry back in a time when we need clear compliant solutions? Meet the Sunrise Issue.

The current state of VASPs — and the Travel Rule

If you have been following crypto's regulatory landscape in the last three years, you've likely come across the term "VASP," which stands for Virtual Asset Service Provider, a term born from the FATF (Financial Action Task Force).

Beyond crafting acronyms, the FATF acts as a global watchdog agency for preventing money laundering in financial transactions. The FATF is responsible for the Travel Rule, a financial regulation that requires banks, crypto exchanges and other crypto players, as of 2020, to share data on participants (customers) in financial exchanges exceeding 1,000 USD/EUR. Some countries have even reduced the threshold to zero. What constitutes a VASP? Broadly speaking, a VASP is a cryptocurrency exchange, liquidity provider or custodian that can be centralized or decentralized.

Related: FATF includes DeFi in guidance for crypto service providers

The sunrise is for everyone, right?

So here's the issue and why it's so detrimental to progress. Compliance needs to be seamless and simultaneous. From a crypto compliance standpoint, let's break down what that means, and how when a VASP posts a request for information on transacting customers to another VASP, issues can arise. VASP "A" (a crypto exchange) operates in a jurisdiction where Travel Rule compliance is required. According to the "Sunrise Issue" analogy, VASP A can see the sunrise in their location and wants the ability to talk about it (exchange customer details) with a counterpart who lives in a different place, where the sun hasn't yet come up (VASP B). VASP "B" is located where the Travel Rule isn't yet a regulatory obligation. VASP B is not only in a different “time zone,” it has different rules altogether. How to solve the dilemma when there is one compliant and one non-compliant VASP?

VASP A (a crypto exchange where money is being deposited or sent) sends an “information request” to VASP B. To return to the Sunrise analogy again, VASP A wants to talk to VASP B about their experience watching the sunrise. VASP A posts a request for this information from VASP B, who doesn’t respond because the sun has not yet come up where they are. It could be tomorrow, it could be a year, but for now, there is a misalignment that is leading to potential non-compliance for VASP A, which will still be held accountable to its specific regulators. The Sunrise Issue strikes.

Related: DeFi: Who, what and how to regulate in a borderless, code-governed world?

Getting real about regulation

Over the past few years, platforms across crypto and DeFi have been hard at work building compliant solutions to government regulations like the Travel Rule. Ideally, these solutions allow VASPs to operate with no interruption to how their customers would normally transact.

The truth is that regulation is no longer an "if" in crypto. It's here — and it's growing. And though the knee-jerk reaction among some in our industry is to villainize regulation, compliance protects customers and exchanges and is put in place to protect against malicious intent and bad actors who set the industry back in our journey towards global mass adoption. This need is real: according to TechCrunch, crypto losses have spiked 695% on year following massive hacks, like last month's $625 million Axie Infinity/Ronin Network exploit. The trick is, how do we remain compliant, protect ourselves and not give up the level of pseudo-anonymity and identity that many of us turned to crypto to experience in the first place?

Related: The loss of privacy: Why we must fight for a decentralized future

How to solve the Sunrise Issue

The answer is compliant solutions that solve the Travel Rule and the Sunrise Issue. If we are going to be a compliant industry, we must ensure that regulation is possible (and frictionless) for all involved parties. For that to be possible, VASPs must be able to process transactions — and transmit the necessary customer data — between each other, regardless of whether one VASP is Travel Rule-compliant and the other is not quite yet adhering to regulations of their jurisdiction because of staggered implementation.

How do we get there? Solutions like Verisope, a Travel Rule solution and decentralized discovery P2P data transmission network just launched by Shyft Network permit a "historic lookback" on any crypto transaction involving a VASP broadcast. This feature allows VASPs to obtain information on any transaction regardless of when it happened, even before the receiving VASP signed on with Veriscope or another Travel Rule solution. As a new VASP joins, they receive these historical data requests and can respond with the necessary information, preventing the industry roadblock (aka the Sunrise Issue) between compliant and non-compliant VASPs.

Crypto deserves better

If there’s ever been a need to democratize access to compliance while protecting customer identity on-chain, that time is now. In late March, we woke up to the news that the European Parliament had voted on implementing new sanctions that would require KYC (know-your-customer) compliance on private, unhosted crypto wallets. Regulation will soon touch every jurisdiction across the globe and every person within each jurisdiction. If exchanges and customers want to transact (and host process transactions) legally, we will need to be able to share key information for current, past and ongoing transactions.

Shared experiences and the ability to communicate are ultimately what make us human. If crypto is here to help improve finance and humanity, we deserve the best solutions to the most challenging problems. Let’s be ready.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Joseph Weinberg was an early investor in Bitcoin in 2010 and director at Coinsetter until its acquisition by Kraken in 2016. He knows his way around the cryptocurrency world. Currently, Weinberg is the co-founder of Shyft Network, the blockchain-based trust network that reclaims trust, credibility and identity. Passionate about advancing the mass adoption of crypto and blockchain, he also serves as an advisor to the OECD and the Financial Stability Board as well as governments and regulatory bodies globally.

SEC Reports Record $8.2B in Remedies With 583 Enforcement Actions in 2024

Half of assessed jurisdictions don’t have ‘adequate laws and regulatory structures’ — FATF

The organization reported that only 9% of countries were “substantially effective” in areas including having banks and VASPs verify users’ information.

The Financial Action Task Force, or FATF, reported that many countries, including those with virtual asset service providers (VASPs), are not in compliance with its standards on Combating the Financing of Terrorism (CFT) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML).

In a report released Tuesday on the "State of Effectiveness and Compliance with the FATF Standards," the organization said 52% of the assessed jurisdictions in 120 countries had “adequate laws and regulatory structures in place” to address illicit transactions. In addition, the FATF reported that only 9% of countries were “substantially effective” in areas having banks, lenders, money transfer services and VASPs verify users’ information.

“Countries need to prioritize their efforts and demonstrate improvements in recording, reporting and verifying information regarding legal persons and arrangements,” said the FATF report. “In order to mitigate high-risk activities such as bearer shares and nominee relationships, competent authorities should be able to quickly access accurate and up-to-date information.”

According to the report, the FATF aimed to build “an effective supervisory and enforcement system comprising a wide range of supervisory measures” to ensure VASPs were in compliance with AML and CFT guidelines. The organization said its supervision of such firms was intended to assess risks and mitigate threats in response to dealing with potentially illicit transactions.

Related: FATF includes DeFi in guidance for crypto service providers

Under FATF guidelines, VASPs operating within certain jurisdictions need to be licensed or registered. Of the 120 monitored countries, the organization identified several in March with “strategic deficiencies” in regards to AML and CFT, including the United Arab Emirates, Malta, Cayman Islands and the Philippines. Many countries are implementing FATF standards in compliance with the organization’s Travel Rule, which is becoming a necessity for many crypto and blockchain firms.

SEC Reports Record $8.2B in Remedies With 583 Enforcement Actions in 2024

Brazilian Congress Aims to Pass Unified Crypto Framework in Coming Months

Brazilian Congress Aims to Pass Unified Crypto Framework in Coming MonthsThe Brazilian Congress is trying to approve a cryptocurrency legal framework before the end of Q2. According to reports from local media, The proponents of the different law projects presented in the Senate and the Congress have stated they will seek the unification of the projects due to their similarity. This new unified project presents […]

SEC Reports Record $8.2B in Remedies With 583 Enforcement Actions in 2024