G7 will oppose Libra launch until regulations in place

Published at: Oct. 12, 2020

Countries representing the world’s largest economies said in a draft of a statement that they would initially oppose the launch of Facebook’s Libra project.

According to an Oct. 12 report from Reuters, central bankers and finance ministers from the United States, Canada, Japan, Germany, France, Italy, and the U.K (also known as the Group of Seven, or G7), said it would halt global stablecoin projects pending appropriate regulatory oversight.

The draft stated:

“The G7 continues to maintain that no global stablecoin project should begin operation until it adequately addresses relevant legal, regulatory, and oversight requirements through appropriate design and by adhering to applicable standards.”

The statement comes from representatives of the seven countries, assembled in June 2019 to examine how central banks can regulate cryptocurrencies. The group has raised concerns over how to ensure digital assets comply with anti-money laundering laws, consumer protection rules and other regulatory matters. A G-7 report last October stated that “global stablecoins” posed a threat to the global financial system.

As a result, Facebook’s Libra stablecoin may not get approval from the necessary regulators. Cointelegraph reported last year that France had teamed up with Germany, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands to prevent Libra from launching in Europe. In April, the G-20’s Financial Stability Board issued a comprehensive stablecoin study, presenting 10 recommendations to regulate them effectively.

The G-7 draft also included the group’s concern over ransomware attacks, which it states “jeopardize essential functions along with our collective security and prosperity.” Such attacks have been on the rise in countries including the United States, France, Germany, Greece, and Italy since the start of the pandemic earlier this year.

Tags
Related Posts
Chasing the hottest trends in crypto, the EU works to rein in stablecoins and DeFi
In cryptoland, the fall tends to be regulators’ open season. As unprecedented as it’s been, 2020 is no exception to this trend. Tensions are high on both sides of the Atlantic: As markets were still processing the news of the United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission cracking down on derivatives exchange platform BitMEX, the Financial Conduct Authority, the British financial watchdog, moved to ban retail investors from using cryptocurrency derivatives altogether. The densely packed news cycle has somewhat muffled the impact of another regulatory bomb that dropped a week earlier and is bound to have major lasting effects on the …
Regulation / Oct. 18, 2020
Law Decoded: The rivalry between central banks and global stablecoins, Oct. 9–16
Editor’s note Blockchain technology has attracted regulatory attention since its inception. The security of the Bitcoin network despite the value of BTC in play has consistently proved the resilience of blockchain technology in maintaining records across a vast range of parties. However, many countries have determined that Bitcoin doesn’t behave as a currency at all, or at least not a replacement for their own. The nations behind the world’s most-used fiat currencies have in many cases pointed to Bitcoin’s volatility as a critical flaw. They have decided that the rise of stablecoins, especially over the past two years, poses a …
Regulation / Oct. 16, 2020
Law Decoded: New threats to self-custody take shape in the US, Nov. 27–Dec. 4
Every Friday, Law Decoded delivers analysis on the week’s critical stories in the realms of policy, regulation and law. Editor's note For several weeks, rumors have circulated in the United States that the Treasury Department under Steven Mnuchin is planning some sort of rulemaking to ban or severely restrict self-hosted cryptocurrency wallets. The Treasury hasn’t made any public statements to support these rumors, but they are persistent and pervasive enough to be worth paying attention to. In the broader cycle of financial news, Secretary Mnuchin is currently under a lot more scrutiny for his plans to return nearly half a …
Regulation / Dec. 4, 2020
Libra Association Forms Steering Committee to Guide Technical Development
The Libra Association — the government body of the eponymous stablecoin introduced by Facebook in late 2019 — has formed a new committee to guide the network’s technical development. According to an announcement on Jan. 16, the Libra Association has voted to establish the five-member Technical Steering Committee which comprises leading experts from various firms in the fintech and blockchain industries. The members are: Calibra core product lead George Cabrera III, Anchorage co-founder Diogo Monica, Union Square Ventures partner Nick Grossman, Bison Trails CEO and founder Joe Lallouz, and Mercy Corps director of emerging technology Ric Shreves. In overseeing the …
Adoption / Jan. 17, 2020
What Role Should Central Banks Have Launching Stablecoins Like Libra?
Ever since the vision for a Libra stablecoin was unveiled in its white paper back in June, Facebook has suffered a startling backlash from countries around the world. Some American politicians have claimed the digital currency has the potential to be more dangerous than 9/11. Lawmakers over in Europe haven’t been too kind either, with Germany’s finance minister warning he is “very, very skeptical” about the project. The main bone of contention with Libra has been the notion of a private company creating a currency designed to rival the likes of the dollar and the pound. Critics fear it would …
Regulation / Oct. 21, 2019