EU LAWMAKERS VOTE TO IMPOSE STRICT CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS ON BANKS HOLDING BITCOIN AND CRYPTO
Banks would be allowed to hold 2% of capital in bitcoin, but required to have one euro in capital for every euro in cryptocurrency held.
European Union lawmakers have voted to impose strict capital requirements on banks that hold cryptocurrencies, per a Reuters article.
In an effort to “prevent instability in the crypto world from spilling over into the financial system,” Markus Ferber, economic spokesperson for the EU parliament’s European People’s Party, says, “banks will be required to hold a euro of own capital for every euro they hold in crypto.”
Lawmakers cite the chaos in the markets seen over the last few months as further evidence that such regulation is necessary.
With events like the collapse of FTX, Celsius and others fresh in the minds of users, the passing of this law is anticipated to be part of a larger set of regulations aimed at bringing the EU into line with international norms.
The passed regulation mirrors that suggested by the Bank for International Settlements’ Basel Committee, which also suggested the highest possible risk tier weighting for holdings of “unbacked crypto.”
Their recommendations placed a 2% limit on tier 1 capital that could be held denominated in unbacked cryptocurrencies.
“There is no definition of crypto assets in the [legislation] and therefore the requirement may apply to tokenized securities, as well as the non-traditional crypto assets the interim treatment is targeted at,” the Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME), an EU lobby group representing finance organizations like investment banks said, indicating that the current form of the law could be unclear, but that draft issues may be fixed later on.
While the European Parliament’s Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee voted to approve the measures, in order for them to go fully into effect, they must also be approved by the European Parliament as a whole, and be presented to the national finance ministers meeting in the Council of the European Union.