WhatsApp Debuts Fiat Electronic Payments While Libra Remains Stuck in Regulatory Maze

Published at: June 15, 2020

WhatsApp has premiered fiat electronic payments on its platform, with Brazil becoming the first country to experience a nationwide release.

According to a statement released Monday by WhatsApp, users that have Visa and Mastercard debit or credit cards from Banco do Brasil, Nubank or Sicredi can now attach instant payments to their messages.

There’s an unspecified monetary limit imposed due to Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism concerns. Additionally, WhatsApp users in Brazil cannot make more than 20 in-app transactions per day.

WhatsApp is reported to have over 120 million users in Brazil, or roughly 57% of the country’s entire population.

While the official press release does not mention any jurisdictions other than Brazil, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said on his personal page that more countries are expected “to come soon.”

Fiat, not crypto

Payments are implemented via Facebook Pay, a payment system developed in 2019 for Facebook-affiliated apps such as Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp.

As the company has stressed in the past, Facebook Pay “is built on existing financial infrastructure and partnerships” and is not related to the Novi (ex. Calibra) wallet that will run on the Libra network.

WhatsApp might use different payment systems for fiat electronic payments in different countries. In India, where the messaging giant has reportedly been testing in-app payments for months, WhatsApp is aiming to use a locally developed solution called UPI, supposedly due to pressure from domestic regulators.

Nonetheless, WhatsApp is still expected to support Libra Coins at some point in the future. Unlike nationwide WhatsApp fiat payments in countries such as Brazil and India, Facebook has been marketing Libra as a global solution for the unbanked.

According to a May press release from Novi, a Facebook-owned digital wallet, it will be integrated into WhatsApp once it is released, supporting payments in in-house stablecoins such as LibraUSD, LibraEUR and Libra GBP, as well as a multicurrency coin called LBR.

Tags
Related Posts
FTC sues Facebook in antitrust lawsuit as regulators mount offensive
The United States Federal Trade Commission has filed a lawsuit against Facebook Inc., where it alleges that the corporation has been engaging in anti-competitive practices ever since acquiring a dominant global position at the turn of the 2010s. According to public case files released on Wednesday, the regulator believes that Facebook has systematically purchased or reproduced the features of any social media competitor that could have posed a threat to the company’s dominance. The lawsuit cites the 2012 purchase of Instagram and 2014 acquisition of WhatsApp as the most egregious examples of anti-competitive practices. According to internal and public communications …
Regulation / Dec. 10, 2020
Stablecoins present new dilemmas for regulators as mass adoption looms
Stablecoins present peculiar challenges to regulators. Although there is no single, agreed-upon definition of a stablecoin, the common denominator of the commonly used definitions is that stablecoins are designed to maintain a stable value in relation to a specified currency, asset or pool of such currencies/assets. They are contrasted with regular cryptocurrencies, which have no such stability mechanism and whose values tend to fluctuate, sometimes even substantially. Related: All risk, no gain? The vague definition of stablecoins is causing problems Stablecoins do not denote a uniform category but represent a variety of crypto instruments that can vary significantly in legal, …
Technology / May 9, 2021
Congresspeople speak out against Tlaib's anti-stablecoin bill
On Wednesday night, Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib introduced a bill before the U.S. House of Representatives looking to make fiat-pegged stablecoin operators abide by the same rules and registration requirements expected of banks. The legislation, under the name “the Stablecoin Tethering and Bank Licensing Enforcement (STABLE) Act,” sets out a fresh and extremely expansive definition of stablecoin. It furthermore dictates a series of limitations that outlaw stablecoin issuance for any entity that is not “an insured depository institution that is a member of the Federal Reserve System,” More aggressively, one of the bill’s provisions would make it: “Unlawful for any person …
Regulation / Dec. 5, 2020
German government unimpressed by Facebook stablecoin's rebrand
Facebook’s Diem stablecoin, which recently changed its name from Libra, is still failing to impress German regulators. As reported by Reuters, German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz voiced his criticism of the project on Monday after a conference between G-7 finance ministers and central bank directors. Scholz called Facebook’s project “a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” highlighting that changing its name would not change its fundamentals. According to him, Facebook and the Diem Association have failed to adequately address its regulatory risks. Until that is done, the German government “will not accept its entry into the market.” Before renaming itself, Libra had …
Regulation / Dec. 7, 2020
WATCH LIVE: CEOs of Facebook, Apple, Amazon and Alphabet Square Off With Congress
Facing rising accusations of running monopolies, the CEOs of four of the world’s biggest tech firms are testifying before the Judiciary Committee’s Antitrust Subcommittee today, July 29. The hearing was originally scheduled for July 27 and was moved to 12PM EST today. It is seeing further delays today and as of 12:25 had not been called to order. Global monopolies The hearing is entitled “Online Platforms and Market Power, Part 6: Examining the Dominance of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google.” It continues a lengthy series of investigations into the role these giant companies play. All of these firms except for …
Regulation / July 29, 2020