Facebook's crypto currency faces pre-G20 examination


  • TECH
  • Thursday, 27 Jun 2019

Facebook promises the new Libra currency, launching next year, will slash transaction costs and bring more services to people without access to the banking system. — AFP Relaxnews

Heading in to the G20 summit, Facebook is on notice from powerful regulators including the Fed chief that its ambitious plans for a global crypto-currency face piercing scrutiny.

The Libra coin is endorsed by a heavyweight consortium of companies, and could see Facebook leverage its two billion-plus users to bring crypto-money out of the shadows and into the mainstream.

But Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell, addressing the launch for the first time on June 25, added his considerable voice to warnings heard already from regulators in Europe and from US lawmakers.

"We're looking at it very carefully," Powell told an event sponsored by the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington.

"Given the possible scale of it, I think that our expectations from a consumer protection standpoint, from a regulatory standpoint, are going to be very, very high," he said.

Facebook promises the new currency, launching next year, will slash transaction costs and bring more services to people without access to the banking system.

But for regulators, Libra is potentially a loose cannon in the armoury of international finance, and Powell was not alone this week in starting to erect his defences as the G20 leaders prepare to meet in Japan this weekend.

Randal Quarles, chairman of the international Financial Stability Board and a deputy to Powell at the Fed, presented a report to the G20 leaders highlighting the risk of crypto-assets being exploited for money-laundering and financing of terrorism.

"Though crypto-assets do not currently pose a risk to global financial stability, gaps may occur where crypto-assets fall outside the scope of regulators' authority or from the absence of international standards," he wrote in a letter to the leaders.

"A wider use of new types of crypto-assets for retail payment purposes would warrant close scrutiny by authorities to ensure that they are subject to high standards of regulation," Quarles added, in a nod to Libra.

One rule for all

The Libra consortium is to be based in Geneva, and the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority confirmed last week that it was looking into the plans.

In a bid to ensure Libra does not go the chaotic way of crypto units such as bitcoin, it is to backed by a basket of real-world currencies including the dollar and euro.

To mint and store new coins, access to its underlying "blockchain" technology will be more restrictive than for the free-for-all of bitcoin.

Bitcoin itself has got a new lease of life on the back of Facebook's announcement last week, with its value rising to above US$12,000 (RM49,730) on June 26.

But much about Libra remains to be resolved to regulators' satisfaction, such as the potential for abuse by bad actors, the exchange rate risk for cross-border transactions, and the unit's liquidity in times of financial crisis.

"The ambition of the project is huge, but it can only exist by respecting the rules that are in place for everyone," Bank of France governor François Villeroy de Galhu told this week's edition of news magazine L'Obs.

In Britain, Financial Conduct Authority chief Andrew Bailey said on June 25 that his agency was working with the Treasury and the Bank of England on Libra, which he said "has the potential to be extremely significant".

"We will have to engage both domestically and internationally, with both Facebook and this other organisation (the Libra consortium)," he told the Treasury select committee in the House of Commons.

"They are not going to walk through authorisation without that," Bailey cautioned.

There was no immediate comment from Facebook to the mounting clamour from financial overseers. Beyond the G20 summit, finance ministers from the G7 club of advanced economies are likely to discuss Libra when they meet in France in mid-July.

On June 24, Facebook's head of global affairs and former British deputy prime minister Nick Clegg said governments, not companies themselves, must regulate social networks on issues including data privacy and election rules. – AFP Relaxnews

The Star Festive Promo: Get 35% OFF Digital Access

Monthly Plan

RM 13.90/month

Best Value

Annual Plan

RM 12.33/month

RM 8.02/month

Billed as RM 96.20 for the 1st year, RM 148 thereafter.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Czech prime minister in favour of social media ban for under-15s
Analysis-Investors chase cheaper, smaller companies as risk aversion hits tech sector
PDRM calls for greater parental vigilance as grooming by online predators leads victims to share more CSAM content
New app helps you sit up straight while at your computer
Dispose of CDs, DVDs while protecting your data and the environment
'Just the Browser' strips AI and other features from your browser
How do I reduce my child's screen time?
Anthropic buys Super Bowl ads to slap OpenAI for selling ads in ChatGPT
Chatbot Chucky: Parents told to keep kids away from talking AI dolls
South Korean crypto firm accidentally sends $44 billion in bitcoins to users

Others Also Read