Showing posts with label remittances. Show all posts
Showing posts with label remittances. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

The bitlicense: current state of thinking in New York

A week ago, the New America Foundation organised a meeting (Cryptocurrencies, the new coin of the realm) on the topic of virtual currencies and regulation in New York. Some news bulletins picked up on the meeting and the future New York Bitlicense regime. The good thing is that the New America Foundation has streamed the whole event, so it allows me (and you) to listen first hand to the speech by Benjamin M. Lawsky, Superintendent of Financial Services, New York State Department of Financial Services (DFS).



I will outline some of the highlights of his contribution below as I think that the New York discussion represents a good example of the issues at stake when it comes to regulation of Bitcoin. I expect to further touch on those issues in my contribution to the Bitcoin Pre-conference expert session of the EPCA-summit in Brussels (March 12-13).

Open source code currencies and open source code regulation
In his speech, Lawsky outlines the current remit of the NY department of Financial Services. It acts as the supervisor for money transmission companies in New York. The DFS-starting point is therefore that in some instances dealing with virtual money may effectively constitute money transmission, which needs to be regulatred. This is similar to the approach in the FINcen guidance of one year ago.

The New York regulator chose to emulate the open source code approach of virtual currencies. And thus, Lawsky refers to the DFS-approach as 'open source code regulation': regulation based on a public exchange of thoughts, allowing the best insights to be used. Given their current remit, the main idea is to see where the money transmitter rules need to change in order to suit the nature of virtual currencies.

As for the further process in 2014, Lawsky explained that the DFS will move towards further regulation this year and will most likely hold a  market consultation for the proposed regulatory framework for companies that want a so-called 'bit-license.'

What will the bitlicense be like?
When listening to the speech, my impression is that the core fundamentals of the bitlicense will be:
- very strong customer disclosure, requiring companies to outline that transactions are irreversible and that the digital currency may be very volatile,
- a strict adherence to know-your-customer requirements, essentially demanding that anti-money laundering rules are adhered to,
- a robustness/capital requirement, ensuring that the company will be able to withstand some of the market shocks that may occur when dealing with volatile digital currencies/commodities,
- safety and soundness requirements, ensuring a certain quality of operations and consumer protection.

As for the nature of capital and collateral requirements, the DFS is still wrestling with the concept of virtual currencies. This has to do with the angle and object of regulation. While it is easy to require capital safeguards for banks that deal with attracting and lending money, this is harder to apply for companies that issue, distribute or redeem virtual currencies.

Similar questions arise when defining the scope of transaction monitoring. Should only the purchase and redeem-transactions be subject to rules or does the supervision extend to a full transaction logging of all transactions with the virtual currency? Should those transactions be in a public ledger and to which extend can they be anonimized?

Step-up regulatory approach with a safe harbour
Although the DFS is still contemplating its exact licensing regime, I expect it to also contain a safe harbour provision. This would allow companies that comply with customer disclosure and know-your-customer rules, to continue to operate, while further obtaining the full bitlicense. Such a regime would assist in lowering the barriers for virtual currency platforms/traders/exchanges and create an easy entry towards the proper regulatory regime.

Lawsky outlined that the regulator prefers companies to be in his state and regulated, rather than driven off-shore. A safe harbour rule helps achieve that and fits a model where a light-weight, low-barrier entry model is developed to prevent legitimate providers from leaving the jurisdiction, while creating a sufficient barrier for the illegitimate players in the market. This is also a realistic approach considering the alternative channels for illegitimate behaviour: cash and banks. In the words of Lawsky:
Let's be frank: a lot more money has been laundered through banks than through virtual currencies'
Boldly go where no man has gone before?
I commend the DFS for their open minded approach to the topic of regulation of virtual currencies. I do disagree however with one of the remarks of the Superintendent. He outlined that regulators are in new and unchartered waters when it comes to virtual currencies.

I don't think they are.

Since day and age, people have used all kinds of symbols, coins and means of representation of goods that worked fine for transferring ownership of property. We created a number of laws and institutions to ensure these property rights and a fair treatment of parties to certain contracts. In doing so we were able to move from coins to paper-based money to deposit accounts. At the same time we created digital representations of shares, bonds, IOUs and agreed that ledgers at private companies and government institutions could officially represent a claim on goods, services, bits of land, anything.

Then, when it comes to new forms of money, we also have recent experience. In the late 1990s we witnessed a very similar type of discussion on bank supervision and specialised supervision regimes for new forms of 'electronic-money' as it was called in those days. It took some time and deliberation to get to grips with pre-paid digital representations of fiat-currencies, but we found our way in the end.

The challenge: finding the right regulatory framework
The true challenge is to first consider the fundamental nature of virtual currencies and then determine the appropriate regulatory framework. In essence, the DFS is doing the reverse as their starting point is their existing legal competence as supervisor of money transmitter businesses. While there is a lot of logic to it, it might be useful to reconsider alternative types of regulation that exist.

It's my hunch that perhaps an exchange/trade oriƫnted regulatory framework might make more sense as the basis for regulation, than the money transmitter framework. So that is what I will explore in my next blog.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Mobile phones as aid in Africa: first results

Dave Birch blogs on the results of a mobile phone used for payment/remittances. Since its formal launch on 6th March:
- people have been registering at the rate of around 1,600 per day,
- there are now around 60,000 registered customers,
- approximately $2.5 million was sent person-to-person in the first nine weeks of operation,
- on a random day recently, more than $157,000 was deposited with M-PESA agents.


Which tells us boundaries continue to blur: is it a phone, is it a bank .... ?

Saturday, March 24, 2007

Fraud in digital age with m-payments

Dave Birch describes/links to this posting that explain how to do fraud via m-payment etc:
This is how it works: You buy a stored value card for X amount of dollars and a prepaid mobile phone. Next, you register with the m-payment service provider using a free anonymous e-mail account, your prepaid mobile phone number and the money on the stored value card. Using your mobile phone, you log on to the m-payment service provider and give them the number of the mobile phone to which you wish to transfer the funds from your stored value card. The m-payment service provider sends a message to the receiver's phone number asking where to transfer the money. The recipient can request the transfer to his stored value card and withdraw the funds from any ATM.

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Skype to offer money-transfer system via PayPal

On quite another scale (compared to yesterdays announcement in Belgium), Reuters informs us that Skype will soon be offering payments, using Paypal technology. Both organisations are within the eBay umbrella of companies and the product will be revealed within a months' time. Planet Internet's assessment is that it is technically a quite simple integration effort, aimed at gaining further foothold in the migrant money market.

Yet, to gain real commercial foothold in that market, I think the Paypal/Skype proposition requires a reloadable pre-paid Visa or Mastercard (to be funded from the Paypal account). Everyone can then send money to the holder of that card who can withdraw money worldwide. Although I can also imagine a bunch of anit-money-laundering reasons for not going this last mile....

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Another remittances report, this time by the BIS...

The Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems (CPSS) and the World Bank issued a report today entitled General principles for international remittance services. Not for use by the market, merely for use by governments/regulators.

The CPSS-World Bank report provides an analysis of the payment system aspects of remittances, on the basis of which it sets out general principles designed to assist countries that are seeking to improve the market for remittance services. The report contains five general principles, covering: transparency and consumer protection; payment system infrastructure; the legal and regulatory framework; market structure and competition; and governance and risk management. The report highlights the roles of both public authorities and remittance service providers in implementing the general principles.

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Remittances via money transfer agencies more expensive than via the bank

Here in the Netherlands, the press are so keen on blaming banks for not competing and not giving the best deal to their customers, that we found articles in the newspaper suggesting that the Ministry of Finance wanted credit-transfers to be cheaper.

Upon closer inspection of the source of the news: the Ministry itself (click here) it turns out that the Ministry of Finance has decided to make life easier for money transfer agents, hoping that their current high level of prices, will be lowered and that the remittance market can better flourish (not so much in the underground sector, but legally).

Effectively, the underlying documentation presents a picture that demonstrates that bank fees are systematically and substantially lower than money remittance fees. Still, the Ministry does not find the market for international remittances sufficiently developed and will ask the competition authority to look more deeply into the issue.

Well, remittances are indeed on the agenda now ......

Monday, April 03, 2006

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Study on improving the efficiency of workers’ remittances by EIB

It's remittance time this week....

Here's another report, now by the European Investment Bank, on the efficiency of workers’ remittances in Mediterranean countries.

The interesting question is of course, if one compares different ways of sending money back to one's home country, what would you do...?

If you knew your brother or nephew would be visiting the home-country, would you then give the money to him, or would you go to Western Union...?

Could it be that it is not just the financial side of sending money that is relevant in choosing the optimum method for remittances.... but that the trust factor needs to be factored in....?

And if so, do studies, assuming a rational choice based on the price of remittance instruments in order to achieve maximum efficiency, make sense?

General principles for international remittance services - BIS consultative report

See this draft report with general principles for international remittance services. It's a consultative report of the Bank for International Settlement, so one may react.

Generally, however, the BIS does not really change the contents on the basis of such reactions. So unless one really has an additional contribution, don't bother... ;-)

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Remittances and anti-money laundering

A somewhat under-estimated part of payment business is the remittance industry. Those looking for more information and a discussion on the good, bad and ugly of anti-money laundering for this industry/the public may want to read the following:

  • Remittance, big business by ethan zuckerman

  • Remittance and money laundering by Adam

  • Remittances - the bane of the Anti-Money Laundering Authorities by Ian Grigg


    Update... the US government also dug into the subject... by producing an overview of money laundering techniques for different sorts of players in the market (banks, money transmitters, currency exchangers etc..). The title is US Money Laundering Threat Assesment and the funny thing is that they have completely missed the channel of payments via the telecommunications bill/infrastructure.... (a blind spot that they will eventually come to appreciate.)