April 14, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

Finland’s Regulatory Watchdog Plans to Supervise Localbitcoins Operations

Finland’s regulatory watchdog plans to supervise localbitcoins operations

Finland’s Regulatory Watchdog Plans to Supervise Localbitcoins Operations

Finland’s regulatory watchdog plans to supervise localbitcoins operations

On Monday, the Helsinki-based peer-to-peer crypto exchange Localbitcoins announced it is adding several different identification processes in order to improve AML and KYC requirements. The move to bolster the new customer verification procedure follows Finland’s Financial Supervisory Authority (FSA) mandating supervision over exchange operations.

Also read: Mineable Cryptocurrencies Are Far More Valuable Than Non-Mineable Coins

Localbitcoins Adds a New Verification Process Due to Regulatory Guidelines

The BTC trading platform Localbitcoins specializes in peer-to-peer and over-the-counter bitcoin exchange throughout nearly every major city in the world. Years ago, the Helsinki operation was well known for providing a platform that allowed people to trade in a private fashion. In those days, traders could swap fiat for bitcoins or vice versa without the KYC processes involved with other exchanges. However, over the last two years, Finland’s regulations and newly introduced policies have made it harder for many crypto businesses to allow trading without verification. In February, Localbitcoins notified customers that changes were coming due to the 5th Anti-Money Laundering Directive (5AMLD) that was enforced by the European Union. Now, this week, the company based in Southern Finland says the FSA’s new exchange supervision mandate has made it impose even stricter AML/KYC guidelines.

The company’s blog post on March 25 details that Localbitcoins will soon be “supervised” by the country’s FSA. The blog post adds that the Virtual Currency Service Providers (VCSP) Act will provide legal status for cryptocurrencies. “[The VCSP Act] should improve significantly Bitcoin’s standing as a viable and legit financial network,” Localbitcoins announcement notes. The trading platform’s post also explains that the team has launched a new registration process and users will still be able to begin trading the day they sign up. The new system administered will inhibit the creation of phony accounts as well.

Other Finland Cryptocurrency Operators Are Also Experiencing Regulatory Pressures

The news follows the harsh regulations and banking issues Finland cryptocurrency operators have been facing in recent times. The exchanges and crypto wallet provider Prasos Oy told the media that Finnish banks will not cooperate with cryptocurrency providers. Henry Brade, Prasos CEO, explained at the time that the company’s operations could be frozen on a whim. “The risk is that we’ll see our last bank account closed before we can get the next one opened — That would freeze our business,” Brade revealed. Moreover, due to the strict regulations, even Finnish law enforcement officials were uneasy about storing 2,000 BTC seized in a criminal forfeiture case. The country’s new treasury guidelines detailed that officials cannot store the seized coins on an exchange and must use cold storage.

Localbitcoins statements this Monday explained that the robust identity verification process was actually “requested by many users.” According to the Localbitcoins founders, there will be four individual tiers for trading certain amounts of BTC volume. Corporate accounts will have to submit a more specialized verification method. Besides the latest requirements, the company has also revealed that “more details on each account level and verification requirements will be announced soon.”

The strict KYC guidelines enforced by Localbitcoins leaves BTC traders very few options for private and verification-free trading besides decentralized trading platforms like Bisq, Barterdex, and Openbazaar. However, liquidity on these particular decentralized applications is still extremely slim in comparison to their centralized counterparts.

What do you think about Localbitcoins being supervised by Finland’s FSA? Let us know what you think about this subject in the comments section below.


Image credits: Localbitcoins, Shutterstock, and Pixabay.


Need to calculate your bitcoin holdings? Check our tools section.

Tags in this story
AML, Anonymous, Barterdex, Bisq, Bitcoin, Bitcoins, BTC, crypto, Cryptocurrency, Digital Assets, finland, Finnish, fsa, Henry Brade, id, KYC, Law Enforcement, LocalBitcoins, N-Featured, OpenBazaar, Prasos Oy, Privacy, Registration Process, Regulation, Regulators, trading, Verification Process
Jamie Redman

Jamie Redman is a financial tech journalist living in Florida. Redman has been an active member of the cryptocurrency community since 2011. He has a passion for Bitcoin, open source code, and decentralized applications. Redman has written thousands of articles for news.Bitcoin.com about the disruptive protocols emerging today.

Published at Wed, 27 Mar 2019 01:01:41 +0000

Previous Article

ICO Review Rasputin Party Mansion – Den Mas – Medium

Next Article

Bitcoin Futures Kingpin Reveals Why Regulators Hate Crypto

You might be interested in …

A Vision of a System Registry for The World Computer

A Vision of a System Registry for The World Computer What does this mean for the human user? A lot of effort to browse, search and trying to understand each interface of each resource one […]

Omise Goes High on Ethereum Boost

Nearly all of the altcoins have been enjoying a bumper run up to the holiday season in crypto land. Many record price highs have been broken in the last week or two as it seems like everyone is stocking up on crypto.


Ethereum has seen record price action in the past few days, surging past its previous high of $753 on December 14th to reach a new one of $831 just a couple of hours ago. ETH is up almost 140% from the same time last month, and market capacity is almost at $80 billion.

Omise on the Go

Since many altcoins are based on the Ethereum platform, their success largely depends on it doing well. Once such digital asset that has rode on the back of Ethereum’s rise, and the words of its creator, is OmiseGO. In a post last week, Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin endorsed OmiseGO by tweeting:

Right now my favorite token model is OMG-style staking tokens.

OMG works on a delegated proof-of-stake, which involves validating the network through running nodes that can be voted for. According to reports, rewards are distributed in a democratized way through the ability to vote for which node to validate the transaction. Rewarding good performers and down-voting poor ones should achieve some form of balance on the network and incentivize everyone to perform well.

OmiseGO views blockchain as a data revolution and not so much a storage ledger as in the bitcoin model. Its cryptographic processes are designed to process data which will bring new opportunities for IT infrastructures and companies other than just financially-based organizations. OMG is big in Asia, especially Thailand, where payment trials are currently in operation with companies such as McDonalds. The ethos is to provide those without a bank account a safe and secure wallet for digital transactions.

Up and Running

OMG is already processing payments, and the system is not new to the crypto scene; it was founded in 2013. Transactions are currently taking place, and more organizations are set to test the technology in the coming months when wallet SDKs and the plasma architecture are to be rolled out. Overall, OMG has a solid roadmap for next year.

OmiseGO has gained an extraordinary 4000% since mid-year. Trading as a sub-dollar coin back in July, it has now topped an all-time high of $20.56 just a few minutes ago. Market capacity is just over $2 billion, and the total supply is just 140 million, with over 100 million already out there. Omise still has a long way to GO in 2018.

How far will Omise GO next year? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.


Images courtesy of Bitcoinist archives, Twitter/@VitalikButerin, and Moody AFB.

The post Omise Goes High on Ethereum Boost appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.