On Tuesday morning, the New York Law School hosted the Bitcoin Law conference, drawing entrepreneurs and enthusiasts from the New York City bitcoin community, as well as many of its own aspiring lawyers.
The event was moderated and largely organized by Houman Shadab, a law professor and director of the schoolâs Center for Business and Financial Law.
Shadab has researched bitcoin and cryptocurrencies extensively, as well as hedge funds, derivatives, securitization and commercial transactions. Earlier this month he spoke to the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission on behalf of the bitcoin community.
Five attorneys took the stage for a panel discussion. They were Blockchain global policy counsel and Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman counsel Marco Santori; Jerry Brito, executive director of nonprofit research and advocacy center Coin Center; Brian Koffler, president of Koffler Legal & Consulting Services; American Express VP and senior counsel Emily H Goodman Binick; and CoinComply managing director Brian Stoeckert.
The discussion, titled The New Landscape for Federal and State Regulation of Cryptocurrencies, began by asking âIs bitcoin money?â However, the panel found, because bitcoin is handled differently by various institutions, it may not matter.
Santori said: âPeople like to talk about what is holding bitcoin back, and what are some of the biggest challenges today? People usually say things like âbankingâ.â
He pointed out why regulation and compliance are both so critical to how banks approach bitcoin, saying:
âRight now in banks and most financial institutions almost a third of their personnel are dedicated to compliance, and that tells us something: it tells us that these institutions canât service an industry unless theyâre going to service it in a compliant manner.â
One perceived problem with digital currencies is that there is no one actively monitoring transactions.
A July Financial Action Task Force report talking about Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) said âthere is no central oversight body, and no anti-money laundering (AML) software currently available to monitor and identify suspicious transaction patternsâ related to digital currencies.
âInitially the market first came out with guidance that certain types of digital currency companies needed to be regulated as money services businesses (MSBs),â Stoeckert explained. âThe original focus was registering as a MSB, the next focus was on establishing policies and procedures, then the next great focus was know-your-customer (KYC).â
What was left over, he said, was the transaction-monitoring component. There are systems for monitoring transactions, Stoeckert explained, but theyâre built against traditional financial services and therefore arenât as suitable for digital currency services.
He said:
âThereâs a gap there that exists, but again thatâs a technology gap that probably will be filled over a period of time.â
He spoke of an âoverriding fearâ from the banking and financial services sector that all bitcoin-related transactions through exchanges or processors, regulated or unregulated, are suspicious. Because of this fear, he explained, banks were very reactive in their approach to filing SARs for about 12â18 months â in large part because of their lack of knowledge of the space.
âThe culture thatâs sort of permeating right now in the law-enforcement environment, as well as in the FinCen environment is that there is a heightened sense of activity and awareness,â he said. âI will say thatâs absolutely changing because of the fact that thereâs a lot more advocacy on the financial institutionsâ side to learn and understand digital currency.â
Binick, the American Express senior counsel, added that the technology gap supplements an emerging issue: how larger banking and financial institutions âoperationalize compliance with the filing requirementâ. Whatever fills the gap should identify which part of a business â any business â looks at the bitcoin transaction and how the transaction should be reported.
Binick said:
âItâs almost impossible to operationalize a reporting structure in a large, already regulated company. Our tax department will see it one way, our AML will see it another way, the lawyers will see it a third way.â
Santori echoed Binickâs sentiments on cross-department conflict, adding that itâs not just internal strife â companiesâ compliance obligations differ according to the countries in which they conduct their business.
Calling to mind the many months it took for the US government to adopt the FinCEN guidance on a federal level, he reminded the attendees that âanybody whoâs looking to incorporate digital currencies has to have that dialectic before they can start doing anything with digital currenciesâ.
That includes every bank, financial institution and credit card company â but eventually, Santori said, competing interests will collaborate and progress.
He concluded:
âItâs not as if all these organisations are hostile to bitcoin, theyâre trying to make it work [â¦] These are regulated institutions, every dollar is a regulated dollar. So you canât do something and not do it right if youâre a bank. You canât move money through your system in a non-compliant way.â
Unusually for a digital currency company, Ripple Labs has managed to form relationships with some banks.
Binick said that from a public relations perspective, Ripple has done well by stating publicly that it wants to remove some layers of payment transactions without replacing or eliminating the regulation.
âTheyâre a slow, steady, long-term play,â Stoeckert said. âItâs not [â¦] moving as quickly as a lot of the digital currencies and bitcoin are, trying to make this little upheaval of the traditional system, and [Rippleâs] going to just slowly move through the system.â
But from the banksâ side, some may be looking at digital currencies as a market play. Binick said it has been helpful for Ripple that it is not a consumer-facing business.
Stoeckert added:
âFinancial institutions want to make money, so theyâre looking at this from the perspective of: can they be a market leader in attracting these types of customers? Because at some point, someoneâs going to do it. Someoneâs going to take market share and the other financial institutions are going to eventually sort of play catch-up.â
Stoeckert and Binick agreed that regulatory compliance is a major, fast-growing marketplace right now and something all lawyers should be looking into.
As demand increases for in-house lawyers with advanced knowledge of how to operationalize compliance with emerging payments and technologies, including bitcoin, it has become the fastest-growing area in every financial institution, they said.
âCompliance departments â theyâre booming inside regulated financial institutions,â Stoeckert said. âItâs a perfect domain. The exit strategy is a lot harder to get in there because thereâs a lack of expertise and [â¦] background to maybe plop yourself into that domain.â