A leading blockchain industry body in Australia says the countryâs current regulatory framework for crypto falls short, particularly when it comes to derivatives trading.
Blockchain Australia (BA) has written to the countryâs Senate Select Committee on Australia as a Technology and Financial Centre, making three primary recommendations, according to a paper released on Friday.
Its recommendations are in response to the committeeâs request for submissions from industry participants on how to improve Australiaâs standing as a âtechnology and financialâ hub. The industry body is calling for a âcoordinated and graduated approachâ to the regulation of digital assets.
BAâs recommendations include implementing immediate safe harbor provisions for crypto providers, greater regulatory guidance, and engagement in the short-term while in the long-term overseeing the establishment of a âfit-for-purpose legislative framework.â
âA staged fit-for-purpose approach, as recommended in the submission, requires consultative and considered commitment of resources,â BA CEO Steve Vallas told CoinDesk via Telegram. âThe submission details the accelerating pace of development across the world. The opportunity for Australia to lead a regulatory discussion will pass.â
Itâs not the first time BA has asked for greater regulatory clarity and considerations for a measured approach to regulating blockchain and crypto. In February the body put forward recommendations to the same committee over the need for more support from the federal government and regulators to boost the confidence of the countryâs blockchain businesses.
The first step, BA recommends, should provide crypto asset providers with a window of time until the introduction of guidance or legislation occurs. âAny legislation should contain an appropriate transition period and not apply retrospectively,â the paper reads.
BA also says a ânew licensing regime modelled off the existing Australian Financial Services Licence,â should be implemented to allow the provision of cryptocurrency financial advice from those involved. Crypto derivatives under the existing licensing legislation are âfundamentally differentâ from traditional derivatives, argues BA.
âAustraliaâs regulatory framework does not take into account such products,â the paper reads. BA says continuous disclosure rules in respect to price-sensitive announcements, custody, clearing and settlement rules, and trading halts are inappropriate for the crypto derivatives market.
The committee says it is taking further evidence before delivering a final report with additional recommendations in October.