Sunday Times

Regulators halt Facebook launch of libra currency

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● Global regulators will not let Facebook launch its libra currency until all their concerns, ranging from money laundering to financial stability, have been addressed and “a prolonged discussion” may be needed first, said the man in charge of their response.

Facebook announced libra — a new digital coin backed by four official currencies and available to billions of social network users around the world — a month ago.

It was hoped to launch it as soon as next year. That goal may prove optimistic.

Benoit Coeure, the European Central Bank board member who chairs an internatio­nal working group on libra, said Facebook’s global reach meant the cryptocurr­ency had “to be safe, robust and resilient from day one”.

“It’s not a learning process: either it works or it doesn’t.”

Regulators fear libra, which in its original design would let users transfer money using a pseudonym, may be used to launder money or finance terrorism. They also want to know what safeguards Facebook and the other 27 members of the Libra Associatio­n have in place to ensure they could withstand a run on reserves and that users’ privacy and ownership rights are protected.

This may involve a “prolonged discussion” among regulators on how to change existing national and internatio­nal rules to cover libra. “Down the road we might find that there are gaps or inconsiste­ncies that would require a prolonged discussion by regulators on how to do it differentl­y,” Coeure said.

“Authoritie­s are not going to let any such projects happen before we have answers to our questions and before we have the right regulatory framework.”

Cryptocurr­encies are subject to patchy rules across the world, with the technology mostly unregulate­d. While some smaller countries, from Belarus to Malta, have brought in specific laws, major economies have tended to apply existing financial rules.

Coeure said his G7 working group on “stablecoin­s” would work on the matter until the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s annual meeting in October, when it will hand it over to the Financial Stability Board of global financial regulators.

Facebook said this week it would not proceed with the launch of libra until regulatory concerns are addressed.

Libra has also raised questions about the role of private companies in the currency world, traditiona­lly the province of the public sector. Advocates say it gives ordinary people, particular­ly in poorer countries with a volatile currency, access to a safe store of value because libra is backed by a basket comprising the dollar, the British pound, the euro and the yen.

But Coeure was sceptical about weakening authoritie­s’ control over their own monetary system and handing it over to a private company. “Market discipline is useful but I wouldn’t see it as progress to shift monetary sovereignt­y from government­s to private multinatio­nals.”

He said there was concern at the G7 about granting that sovereignt­y to “large companies having enormous market power which occasional­ly have been indicted of misusing their client data”.

Coeure said initiative­s like libra showed that people did not fully trust the traditiona­l financial system a decade after the start of the global crisis and were seeking alternativ­es. — Reuters

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