The newly appointed chief of Japanâs top financial regulator has stated his belief that there is no need for âexcessiveâ regulation of the countryâs cryptocurrency industry.
Speaking to Reuters on Wednesday, Toshihide Endo, commissioner of the Financial Services Agency (FSA), said his agency is trying to regulate cryptocurrency exchanges in a way that protects consumers and yet doesnât stifle innovation.
He told the news source:
âWe have no intention to curb [the cryptocurrency industry] excessively We would like to see it grow under appropriate regulation.â
Endoâs comments echo statements previously made by representatives of the FSA. In September of last year, an unnamed executive of the regulator was quoted by The Japan Times as saying, âWe pursue both market fostering and regulation enforcement. ⦠We aim for sound market development.â
That comment came even as the FSA moved to more closely scrutinize exchanges to ensure they adhered to a revised payment services law, passed in April 2017. The new rules defined operational standards for exchanges and set up a licensing scheme for exchanges, as well as, in a world first, recognizing bitcoin as a form of legal tender.
In January of this year, a $530 million hack of the countryâs Coincheck exchange prompted the FSA to launch inspections and issue âbusiness improvement ordersâ for exchanges that were deemed to have inadequate systems in place.
Endo was appointed commissioner of the FSA in July, having previously been director-general of the agencyâs supervisory bureau.
Japanese yen image via Shutterstock