The European central bankers are claiming oversight over Facebook’s planned virtual currency to ensure it will not jeopardize the financial system or be used to launder money.

Facebook drew worldwide interest this
week when it announced plans to introduce a cryptocurrency called Libra,
part
of an effort to expand into digital payments.
Facebook said Libra would be
backed by real-world assets, including bank deposits and short-term government
securities, to make it more stable — and thus practical for payments and money
transfers — than other cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin.
With the potential to reach
billions of internet users and the backing of payment giants like Visa,
Facebook hopes Libra will not only power transactions but offer people without
bank accounts access to financial services for the first time.
But the central bankers of
Britain, France and Germany said Facebook should expect scrutiny.
“It has to be safe, or it’s
not going to happen,” Bank of England Governor Mark Carney told the BBC in an
interview broadcast on Friday.

Global central bankers have so far
largely refrained from regulating digital currencies, having failed last year
to reach an agreement on how to do so and concluding they were too small to
pose a risk to the financial system.
Other global regulators have
been monitoring the growth of cryptocurrencies. The Financial Action Task
Force, a Paris-based global anti-money-laundering watchdog, is expected to announce
rules to address the use of digital coins for illegal purposes.
But Libra’s announcement has
put the issue back on their radar, with the focus now shifting from bitcoin to
so-called stablecoins, such as Facebook’s Libra, that are backed by real-world
assets.
France said on Friday it
would create a task force on the matter as part of its presidency of the Group
of Seven club of the world’s seven largest economies. It will be chaired by
European Central Bank board member Benoit Coeure.
“It will in the coming months
examine the anti-money laundering requirements, but also those of consumer
protection and operational resilience and any issues relating to monetary
policy transmission,” said France’s central bank governor, Villeroy de Galhau.
His German counterpart, Jens
Weidmann, warned that stablecoins could undermine banks if they became a
widespread alternative to bank deposits in conventional currencies.
“They could undermine the
deposit-taking of banks and their business models,” Weidmann said on Friday.
“This might disrupt transaction banking and financial market intermediation.”
One of the issues to be considered by
the G7 task force is custodianship, or where and how the official currencies
underpinning the tokens would be stored, according to a letter seen by Reuters.
This is a crucial point for
stablecoins. Tether, the highest-profile stablecoin, with coins worth around
$3.6 billion in existence, has faced questions over whether it holds enough
U.S. dollars to back the tokens in circulation. The company has said it has
sufficient reserves.
Facebook is grappling with
public backlash after a series of scandals ranging from privacy breaches to
accusations that it is restricting freedom of speech.
- Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment