January 26, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

German Court Ruling Raises Questions about Bitcoin’s Legal Status

German court ruling raises questions about bitcoin’s legal status

German Court Ruling Raises Questions about Bitcoin’s Legal Status


Germany bitcoin regulation
Advertisement

Until recently, Germany’s Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) classified bitcoin as a financial instrument, but a subsequent court ruling disclaimed this categorization and decided that the cryptocurrency does not meet this definition under the terms of the German Banking Act (KWG).

bitcoin Unrecognizable to German Legal Framework

The Berlin Court of Appeal in September dismissed a criminal proceeding against the operator of a local bitcoin trading platform. The German enforcement had arrested the administrator for facilitating the trades of financial instruments like bitcoin without obtaining a BaFin permit. While the Berlin-Tiergarten had sentenced the accused for providing financial services, the Berlin Regional Court reversed the judgment, stating that BaFin misinterpreted the legal status of bitcoin. According to Mondaq, The 4th Criminal Division of Berlin Court of Appeal favored the regional court’s ruling, confirming that the German regulators extended the scope of criminal law to bitcoin without synchronizing it with the banking acts.

Citing Section 1(11) of the KWG, the appeal court stated that neither the central bank nor any public authority issues bitcoin. The digital currency lacks general recognition and a stable value that could allow its use to compare goods or services. Therefore, it cannot gain the status of units of account – or financial instruments — contrary to what was enforced by the BaFin in May 2018.

The judgment also shed light on the matters related to the sale and purchase of bitcoin in Germany. The court, reading Section 1(32), ruled that bitcoin trading is not subjected to permits or licenses, and consequently – per Section 1(54) – was not a criminal offense. Due to these facts alone, BaFin couldn’t extend the scope of criminal penalties on the accused.

The appeal court also criticized the financial regulator for crossing the boundaries of federal authorities, stating that it was not their responsibility “to exercise a modifying influence (in particular) on criminal laws.”

Regulatory Inconsistencies Deepen

Germany bafin bitcoin
BaFin had classified bitcoin as a financial instrument. Following a recent court ruling, however, its legal status is less clear.

The court ruling has deepened the inconsistencies in the ways each European country interprets bitcoin law. The European Union has passed a motion in 2016 that enabled taxation of cryptocurrency holdings, investments, and profits. The provision, however, didn’t settle any definition for cryptocurrencies as a whole. Individual countries in the Eurozone awarded bitcoin a legal status in their jurisdictions, but the digital currency never attained a particular Europe-wide regulatory framework for itself.

Jörg von Minckwitz, President of Bitwala, a blockchain banking service based out of Germany, believes each European country should get on the same page before writing the first bitcoin bill.

“In the past years, Bitwala has repeatedly spoken out in favor of legal clarity and a regulatory level playing field in the EU,” he said in a statement provided to CCN. “As digitization affects society across borders, this can only be done in unison. Currently, every EU country seems to have their interpretation, which results in regulatory arbitrage to the detriment of German consumers and innovators.”

BaFin, after the court ruling, cannot penalize people holding or trading cryptocurrencies unless it joins hands with lawmakers to create new legal provisions to modify the KWG. As for now, bitcoin and similar digital assets will be subjected to European regulations.

Images from Shutterstock

Follow us on Telegram or subscribe to our newsletter here.

Advertisement


Published at Wed, 24 Oct 2018 22:33:09 +0000

Previous Article

ICO Trust Returning as Caspian Rakes in Nearly 20 Million Ahead of Deadline

Next Article

Cryptocurrency Could Pave Way for New Financial Order, Says Expert

You might be interested in …

GreenAddress Is Now the First Mobile Wallet to Offer SegWit Transactions

GreenAddress and Segwit

GreenAddress (and its reimplementation GreenBits), the bitcoin wallet that was acquired by blockchain infrastructure company Blockstream last year, is the first mobile wallet to offer Segregated Witness (SegWit) transactions. This means that GreenAddress users are among the first to benefit from lower fees and faster transaction times enabled by the long-awaited protocol upgrade.

“The bitcoin network is currently not being spammed, so transactions with low fees are getting confirmed — however, with SegWit the required fees are even lower; they’re almost cut in half,” GreenAddress developer Lawrence Nahum told bitcoin Magazine.

Once upgraded, all new addresses generated by the GreenAddress wallet will be SegWit addresses (though wrapped in a P2SH address, so they still look the same as before). Receiving payments on these addresses does not differ from typical addresses in any way, nor does spending bitcoins from different addresses. But when users spend the bitcoins from the SegWit addresses later on, the protocol upgrade is utilized. This outgoing transaction that requires lower fees will be included in a block more quickly.

GreenAddress is not the first wallet to enable SegWit: hardware wallets Ledger and Trezor introduced the new feature last week. But in both cases, of course, using the new feature requires owning such hardware devices. GreenAddress, on the other hand, is available to anyone with a smartphone or a computer; if the fees on competing wallets are too high, users can easily switch to GreenAddress.

“We are now the first mobile wallet to implement the solution, but I feel the ecosystem, unlike with previous soft fork upgrades, is moving really fast,” Nahum said. “Hardware wallets are leading, Armory also has support, bitcoin Core will have it in the 0.15.1 release, and I’m sure the others will move fast as they have strong incentives: In GreenAddress transaction fees are pretty much halved.”

Interestingly, the malleability fix that Segregated Witness provides will be utilized by GreenAddress as well. Due to malleability — the ability to change the appearance of unconfirmed transactions — spending bitcoins from unconfirmed transactions could fail due to meddling of third parties. While this will not lead to a loss of funds, it could make for a bad user experience, which is why it wasn’t available to most users. With the malleability fix, this issue will now be resolved, and GreenAddress users can re-spend unconfirmed bitcoin balances straight away.

Over the years, GreenAddress has made a name itself by pioneering new features enabled by bitcoin protocol upgrades. The wallet was, for example, the first to offer opt-in replace-by-fee, which allows users to bump the fee of an outgoing transaction. It was also among the first wallets to offer modern multisig addresses, the first wallet to include fee estimation instead of static fees, the first mobile wallet to support hardware wallets, and more.

The post GreenAddress Is Now the First Mobile Wallet to Offer SegWit Transactions appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.