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Crypto Exchanges in the Hot Seat as Japanese Regulators Increase Oversight

Crypto exchanges in the hot seat as japanese regulators increase oversight

Crypto Exchanges in the Hot Seat as Japanese Regulators Increase Oversight

Crypto exchanges in the hot seat as japanese regulators increase oversight

The Financial Services Agency (FSA), which doubles as both Japan’s crypto and financial regulatory watchdog, has ordered all bitcoin trading venues and digital assets exchanges in the region to strengthen their know-your-customer (KYC) and anti-money-laundering (AML) measures, as part of preparation for the upcoming G-7 summit and FATF inspection, reports Nikkei on May 22, 2019.

FSA Fixing the Loopholes

Per sources close to the matter, the FSA is increasing its countermeasures for money laundering and all forms of illicit practices in the nation’s financial sector, including its cryptospace.

Though the FSA has been working hard to sanitize its cryptocurrency ecosystem for quite some time now, this latest move has been triggered by the upcoming inspection of the region’s anti-money laundering regime by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) this fall, as well as the G-20 summit slated for this summer.

Reportedly, Japan will be the chair of this year’s G-20 meeting, where money laundering countermeasures is one of the hottest topics to be discussed.

Against that backdrop, the FSA is trying as much as possible to avoid falling behind other participating states in terms of AML policy implementation.

Crypto Exchanges Asked to Sit Tight

As reported by BTCManager in April 2018, Japanese regulators mandated crypto exchanges in the nation to delist privacy-centric cryptoassets like dash, monero, and zcash, in a bid to curb anonymous trading and money laundering.

Though some exchanges including the now-revamped Coincheck, have since stopped supporting such altcoins, it is still unclear whether all the cryptocurrency trading venues in Japan have complied.

Now, the FSA has made it clear that it would not spare exchanges that are found wanting, either in areas of poor KYC procedures or facilitating anonymous transactions.

In October 2018, the FATF published fresh guidelines to govern the use of virtual currency for financial purposes, initial coin offerings (ICOs) and more, while also urging member nations to formulate and implement licensing and registration systems to ensure market participants operate in full compliance with the rules.

The intergovernmental body will reportedly be in Japan later this year, to assess the Japanese money laundering laws. The body is expected to point its searchlight into the processes of crypto exchanges, banks and credit unions.

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Published at Fri, 24 May 2019 10:00:10 +0000

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