Financial Stability Board to Hold Crypto Providers to ‘Same Standards as Banks’

The FSB's proposed rules come as many jurisdictions, such as the UK and European Union, finally clarify their regulations around crypto.

By Will McCurdy

3 min read

The Financial Stability Board (FSB), the world’s largest financial services regulator, has said it is set to hold crypto firms “to the same standards as banks . . . if they provide the same service that banks provide.”

A spokesperson for the global watchdog told the Financial Times it is set to lay out a new set of international rules governing cryptocurrencies in early 2023, which would then be implemented by local governments. 

The FSB was established in 2009, directly after the 2008 credit crunch. The Swiss organization monitors and makes recommendations about the global financial system alongside organizations such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization.  

In terms of specific areas of focus, Dietrich Domanski Secretary General of the FSB said there may be regulations governing where there is “a combination of different activities that are traditionally separate.”

He said the new framework may include rules to “clarify governance arrangements and ensure transparency” and to “safeguard” customer funds in the case of a “run,” where consumers rush to withdraw their funds all at once. 

The regulator claimed that holding crypto firms to such standards would have prevented disasters such as the FTX scandal and the Terra Luna collapse earlier this year, which have led to historically low prices for both cryptocurrencies and the relevant service providers. 

Domanski emphasized that his organization will try and act with a degree of urgency when implementing these guidelines, saying that: “I don’t think that we would be talking about a decade,” adding that this period would be “would be way too long.”

He said crypto regulation was one of the FSB’s primary objectives, alongside climate regulation and non-bank regulation.

The exec also defended his organization from accusations that it has moved slowly in the past, saying that he would “invite them to follow a global cooperative process” and then tell him that the FSB could have moved faster. 

FSB regulations and the global community

The move towards a solidified global set of regulations comes as many regions are now clarifying their rules governing crypto assets. 

The EU recently instituted a new set of rules governing the taxation of crypto assets as part of a much broader set of tax regulations, which will force companies of any size processing crypto transactions to report these for tax purposes. 

The UK government, as part of a broadly liberal set of new financial regulations, extended tax breaks for investment managers turning to crypto as part of the package of over 30 reforms.

Get crypto news straight to your inbox--

sign up for the Decrypt Daily below. (It’s free).

Recommended News