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Germany Takes Over FATF Presidency With New Guidance on Crypto Standards

Germany Takes Over FATF Presidency With New Guidance on Crypto Standards

The Monetary Action Task Force (FATF) has a new president as Germany took over the presidency from China. The intergovernmental federation also highlighted the need for more guidance on cryptocurrencies as many countries have not yet fully implemented its revised crypto standards. Another weigh has also been announced.

Germany Now Leads FATF

The FATF has a new president, Dr. Marcus Pleyer of Germany, who succeeded Xiangmin Liu of China. Pleyer presents as Deputy Director General in Germany’s Ministry of Finance. His two-year term as the president of the anti-money laundering watchdog began on June 1.

Pleyer presented his designs at the lastest FATF virtual plenary, which took place on June 24 and published on Wednesday. Regarding the consortium’s “new standards on virtual assets,” he declared: “The German Presidency intends to build on this work, focusing on the opportunities that technology can presentation, by launching an initiative to monitor risks and explore opportunities.” Compared to China, Germany is much more crypto-friendly; the nation began regulating the industry early this year and at least 40 banks in the country have reportedly expressed engross in offering crypto services.

At the plenary, the FATF also revealed the outcome of the 12-month review it conducted on how each native land implemented its new cryptocurrency standards. Overall, “both the public and private sectors have made progress in implementing the edited FATF standards, in particular in the development of technological solutions to enable the implementation of the ‘travel rule’ for VASPs [virtual asset maintenance providers],” the intergovernmental organization detailed.

While insisting that there is currently no need for revised supports on crypto assets, the FATF “did highlight the need for further guidance on virtual assets and VASPs.” The FATF believes, “This will cure members of the FATF global network, many of whom have not yet fully implemented the revised standards, to make the high-priority progress,” noting:

The FATF will continue its enhanced monitoring of virtual assets and VASPs by undertaking a second 12 month rethinking by June 2021.

Germany Takes Over FATF Presidency With New Guidance on Crypto StandardsGermany Takes Over FATF Presidency With New Guidance on Crypto Standards

The subject of stablecoins was also discussed at the plenary, “particularly those that have the potential to be mass-adopted,” repeatedly referred to by regulators as “global stablecoins.” An example of a global stablecoin is the cryptocurrency libra, originally proposed by social mean giant Facebook. The FATF has prepared a report on global stablecoins for the G20 as requested. The anti-money laundering watchdog believes that far-reaching stablecoins “could potentially cause a shift in the virtual asset ecosystem and have implications for money laundering and incendiary financing risks.”

The FATF further confirmed that its crypto standards apply to stablecoins and no amendments to the standards are call for at this time. Nonetheless, it recognizes that “this is a rapidly evolving area and that it is essential to continue to closely keep track of the ML/TF [money laundering/terrorism financing] risks of so-called stablecoins, including anonymous peer-to-peer transactions via unhosted notecases.”

What do you think about the FATF imposing its standards on the crypto industry? Let us know in the comments section below.

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