(Dinarian Note: Watch what THEY do, NOT what THEY say!)
During a UK Parliamentary hearing yesterday, the Economic Secretary of the Treasury and City minister, Andrew Griffith, outlined the regulatory agenda for the crypto-asset sector and HM Treasuryās stance towards the industry.
The Minister laid out three topics that should be addressed by legislation in 2023. This includes the regulation of stablecoins in theĀ Financial Services and Markets BillĀ (FSM), which is expected to pass around April. We wrote aĀ separate pieceĀ about his discussion of wholesale stablecoins and central bank digital currency.
The FSM Bill also includes enabling theĀ FMI SandboxĀ for financial market infrastructures, which asĀ previously reported, will start with DLT-based securities settlement systems.
A third topic is the promotion of crypto-assets, where the Treasury plans to introduce legislation this year to include crypto as part of financial services promotion to enhance consumer protection.
In the next few weeks, two consultations will be launched on central bank digital currency (CBDC) and broader crypto-asset regulation. However, itās not envisioned that comprehensive crypto legislation will be introduced this year.
Government wants to avoid āforeclosing on the futureā
Griffith was keen for the government not to second guess which technologies will gain traction. Given the nascent nature of blockchain and cryptocurrencies, it is reluctant to impose comprehensive legislation at this stage. Itās keen to balance consumer protection with the support of innovation.Ā
When asked whether he was bothered that 2.3 million people in the UK had engaged in speculative cryptocurrencies, the Minister said the issue is the extent to which they understand the risks.Ā
The Treasuryās Laura Mountford added that the FCA estimated that 40% of investors knowingly purchase crypto-assets as a gamble. Hence a significant proportion are aware of risks, and the aim is to expand that.Ā
The Minister said he was reminded of the āPresident of Michigan Savings Bank (who) said to Henry Fordās lawyer, āthe horse is here to stay, but the automobile is only a novelty, a fad.'ā Hence Griffith doesnāt want to āforeclose on the future.ā
He gave a nod to EuropeāsĀ MiCA legislationĀ but noted that it does not cover decentralized finance (DeFi), whereas the UK plans to include DeFi when it eventually proposes legislation.
Keen on institutional DLT applications
Griffith spoke about the middle and back office opportunities of blockchain, including āmaintaining registers and ledgers in a way that is more resilient than a central depository, that offers atomic settlement time, that removes intermediaries. And often when we think about financial risk, itās the intermediaries, whether itās a clearing house or a counterparty, that is where the risk sits.āĀ
He mentioned that disruptive technology āoften opens up new sectors, new opportunities that we all find quite hard to forecast as we are here today.ā Hence, he added that he doesnāt see a DLT future as inevitable but said thereās a need to be open to the possibilities.