Digital currency exchanges in Italy are not required to enforce anti-money laundering policies, according to the countryâs central bank.
Banca dâItalia issued three notices on 30th January advising financial institutions not to hold or deal in digital currencies in the absence of a regulatory regime.
However, one of the notices, from the bankâs Financial Intelligence Unit, clarified that businesses dealing in the exchange of digital and fiat currencies are not required to comply with anti-money laundering rules.
âThe use, exchange and storage of digital currencies and their conversion to legal currencies are not addressed by the money-laundering legislation and therefore are not required to comply with requirements of customer data recording and reporting of suspicious transactions,â the notice says.
However, the bank did strongly encourage firms dealing in digital currency exchange to voluntarily apply AML rules.
The bankâs overall position is in line with statements about digital currencies made by the European Banking Authority last July and first set out by the European Central Bank in December 2012.
The Italian central bankâs statement has been cautiously welcomed by cryptocurrency businesses and activists in the country.
Andrea Medri, who founded cryptocurrency exchange The Rock Trading in Italy, said he was pleasantly surprised by the tone of the central bankâs guidance, but only because he expected more negative rhetoric.
âWhen we talk about central banks we always expect the worse, but in my opinion it is not as bad as it could have been,â he said. âWe are cautiously optimistic.â
Medri said the latest announcements did not contain any explicit new guidance for firms like his, although he welcomed the fact that the central bank appeared to be building on guidance from European regulators.
The central bankâs latest guidance should be viewed as a positive development for the cryptocurrency industry in Italy, said Giulia Aranguena, a lawyer who advises Cashless Way, an association that promotes digital payments.
âThis is a very good first step for our market to organise and give a sort of certainty, it is very positive ⦠indirectly it is recognising the role and importance of digital currencies,â she said.
The Rock Tradingâs founder said he is particularly interested in regulatory movements surrounding bitcoin in Italy because he had moved his firm to Malta and is seeking to return to Italy if the regulatory environment becomes more settled.
The entrepreneur said his exchange implemented voluntary AML and know-your-customer rules a year ago, so the latest announcements would have had no impact on his operations, even if still based in Italy.
Italian law-makers are actively engaged with the cryptocurrency community, but are likely awaiting guidelines from European authorities before making further moves, Medri said.
âI believe, eventually, Italy will require the equivalent of a money-transmitterâs licence in the United States, and I hope they will create a dedicated licence for [the digital currency] industry,â he said.
Other market-watchers agree with Medriâs assessment that Italian regulators are likely waiting for European authoritiesâ cue.
One such observer is Franco Cimatti of Bitcoin Foundation Italy, a trade organisation that is not affiliated with the Bitcoin Foundation. He warns that the central bankâs latest guidance should be viewed critically because local legislators are far from agreement on how digital currencies should be governed.
âEven if this seems like good news, it will not stop our politicians from creating bad laws. We are still keeping our eyes wide open to see what will happen in the future,â he said.
Featured image from Andrea Giovanni / Flickr