UK Financial Watchdog Reminds Crypto Businesses to Register Ahead of Deadline

Published at: June 22, 2020

The United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority, or FCA, on Monday urged all national cryptocurrency businesses to submit their registration with the regulatory watchdog.

According to the FCA’s statement, firms must submit completed applications by June 30. The regulator says that the anticipated deadline is necessary to ensure that all applications are processed by the end of the grace period on Jan. 10,  2021.

As Cointelegraph reported at the time, this follows the FCA’s appointment as a direct regulator of U.K. cryptocurrency businesses, announced on Jan. 10, 2020.

The regulator set forth compliance requirements for certain types of crypto-related activity, which involve full assessment of risk in terms of Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Counter-Terrorism Financing regulations (CTF). 

Companies doing business in the United Kingdom will need to establish both monitoring and control systems to eliminate potential AML and CTF threats. Failure to comply by the 2021 deadline means that they will need to cease their activity in the country.

The June 30 deadline “allows the FCA to review submitted applications and raise any follow-up questions with firms,” the statement reads.

Furthermore, traditional fintech companies dealing with crypto assets that are already authorized under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000, Electronic Money Regulations 2011 or Payment Services Regulations 2017, will also need to submit their application for the enhanced regulatory monitoring.

The watchdog warned that it “will proactively supervise firms’ compliance with the new regulations, and will take swift action where firms fall short of desired standards.”

Wave of regulatory tightening

As Cointelegraph reported previously, the recent actions by the FCA are part of an effort to bring the U.K regulatory environment on par with the global standards defined by FATF, and the 5AMLD EU regulation, in force since 2020.

The regulator’s efforts have a clear objective of cutting down on potential money laundering and terrorism financing pathways enabled by crypto’s anonymity, as experts told Cointelegraph earlier.

In July 2019, the FCA pledged that it would not regulate Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH), focusing instead on the infrastructure around them, as well as other tokens that could constitute securities.

The FCA had also set its sights earlier on some types of crypto derivatives, specifically contracts for difference and exchange-traded notes. 

While the regulator appears to have ultimately refrained from definitive crypto bans, it appears to have instead shifted its strategy to tight regulatory controls.

Tags
Aml
Related Posts
51 crypto firms withdraw licensing applications in the UK
Strict Anti-Money Laundering laws in the United Kingdom appear to be constituting a major operational hurdle for crypto firms in the country. According to the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), several crypto businesses in the country might be preparing for an exit. In a release issued on Thursday, the regulatory agency revealed: “A significantly high number of businesses are not meeting the required standards under the Money Laundering Regulations. This has resulted in an unprecedented number of businesses withdrawing their applications.” According to a report by The Guardian, 51 companies have so far failed to meet the FCA’s AML standards …
Regulation / June 4, 2021
Crypto firms not meeting AML standards, says UK minister
Cryptocurrency businesses in the United Kingdom have been struggling to meet Anti-Money Laundering standards set by the Financial Conduct Authority, according to a senior official. John Glen, a member of U.K. Parliament and the economic secretary to the Treasury, pointed out major difficulties in the process of registering crypto firms under the FCA’s AML regulations in official comments on Friday. According to the official, only five crypto businesses have received registration from the FCA as of May 24 after the authority became the official AML supervisor of the crypto industry in the U.K. in January 2020. “Of the firms assessed …
Bitcoin / May 28, 2021
UK crypto firms must now submit yearly financial crimes reports
The United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority has included cryptoasset businesses under the financial crimes reporting umbrella eight months after initially announcing plans to do so. The FCA made this known via a policy statement issued on its website on Wednesday. This move comes as the country’s financial regulator has increased the number of firms required to submit annual financial crime report known as “REP-CRIM” from 2,500 to about 7,000. According to the policy statement, the FCA declared that compliance with REP-CRIM reporting was a necessary tool to enable regulators to combat money laundering activities. In its 2020/2021 business plan, the …
Regulation / March 31, 2021
When Big Ben Rings: UK FCA’s Stance on Crypto Seen as Harsh but Fair
Recently, the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority released a detailed statement urging all local crypto business operators to register with the government watchdog by June 30. As part of the document, the regulator has made it absolutely clear that applications will need to have been processed, at the latest, by the end of the official grace period, which ends on Jan. 10, 2021, and failing to meet the requirement will result in a default. From a more technical standpoint, the FCA’s latest registration guidelines come laden with a number of specific compliance quotas, primarily in relation to crypto-related activities like …
Bitcoin / June 28, 2020
Uphold becomes registered crypto-asset firm in UK post-FCA approval
A European subsidiary of United States-based crypto trading platform Uphold has received approval from the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). According to the FCA website, Uphold’s U.K. subsidiary Uphold Europe Limited gained regulatory approval on Feb. 17, 2022, joining the select list of 32 firms that have received FCA approval as a Registered Crypto Asset service provider, out of the 200 that applied. The approval signifies that the firm is in compliance with the U.K. Anti-Money Laundering and CounTerrorist Financing regulations. In order for crypto exchanges and service providers to offer their services to U.K.-based customers, they must register …
Regulation / Feb. 23, 2022