Fintech analyst and research firm Autonomous NEXT has published a new report on the state of blockchain-based initial coin offerings (ICOs).
Released today and entitled âToken Mania,â the 70-page publication takes a unique look at the regulatory and operational challenges the novel fundraising model, which is fast becoming the main capital driver in the sector, poses for business and investors.
âWe try to give folks that may be deep in financial services, but not deep in the crypto economy, a primer,â said Lex Sokolin, the firmâs global director of fintech strategy, on the report, though he acknowledged it is not intended to provide legal advice.
Overall, the report singles out six different countries â Switzerland, Singapore, Russia, China, the U.K. and the U.S. â to highlight the state of play for ICOs and cryptocurrencies more generally.
Perhaps most notably, the report considers Switzerland and Singapore to be two of the more advanced nations for creating welcoming environments for fintech and cryptocurrencies. Notably, the two countries have agreed to cooperate on fintech rules.
In Switzerland, business is regulated by the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority, or FINMA, but cryptocurrency companies do not require any specific approval or license, the report finds. Under the law, cryptocurrencies are assets rather than securities.
Similarly, cryptocurrencies are assets in Singapore rather than funding or payment instruments according to the regulator, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). The authority does not regulate virtual currency transactions, but does monitor KYC and AML, the report states.
âSwitzerland is relevant because exchanges and firms are moving there, theyâre jurisdiction shopping,â Sokolin explained, adding:
âSingapore is in a similar position because itâs favorable to token launches and companies that focus on cryptocurrency.â
This is not to say the regulators arenât keeping an eye on things.
This week the Swiss government said itâs working on rules for cryptocurrencies. Meanwhile, in Singapore, there is ongoing development of a Proposed Payment Framework (PPF) that would review existing payments and remittance regulations, and this would include virtual currency intermediaries.
Other countries were viewed as less welcoming by the report.
In particular, Autonomous NEXT singled out the U.K. and the U.S. as jurisdictions with high activity, but a lack of legal clarity.
âWe looked at the U.K. and U.S. because thereâs quite a bit of blockchain activity at the enterprise level and the consortium level, but thereâs not much clarity around the crypto economy,â said Sokolin.
The UK, like Singapore, has a regulatory sandbox to help test out new financial projects. As a result of that, the regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is taking a wait-and-see approach to distributed ledger technology, according to the report.
As it stands, cryptocurrency and tokens are considered âprivate currency,â and as for ICOs specifically, issuers are operating on their own interpretation of the law. The FCA has published a broad paper on DLT and crypto tokens, but this is not binding, so the landscape for ICOs in the U.K. could very well change in the near future.
The U.S. meanwhile was described as having an âalphabet soup of regulatorsâ that makes issuing tokens more complex. Then thereâs also the individual 50 states that implement their own rules, such as the so called âBitLicenseâ in New York, and Delaware, the âhome of American incorporationâ, which has introduced a variety of blockchain-related legislation.
Sokolin told CoinDesk that the complex regulatory environment in the U.S. means less experimentation is ongoing domestically:
âYou see a bunch of countries working on passporting between these fintech sandboxes, where you can experiment and try things out. In the U.S., thereâs an OCC fintech charter, but itâs for banks and itâs not yet implemented.â
Also examined is China, which is fast emerging as one of the more active countries for cryptocurrency and blockchain innovation.
There, the report outlines how the Peopleâs Bank of China (PBoC), the countryâs central bank, has established a digital currency research institute that provides assistance to startups and projects. Tokens there are considered a non-monetary digital asset, according to the paper.
It goes on to outline how China has its own plans to introduce a fintech sandbox, but that ICOs more generally are unregulated.
According to the Autonomous NEXT report, more than 2 million people have taken part in ICOs in China, while the PBoC is considering regulations to address the perceived high risk and to monitor ânon-professional investors.â
âThe population is more connected into it,â explained Sokolin, adding:
âThrough our network weâve heard that social media advertising of ICOs is much more prevalent than it is in the Western world. Itâs a different investing climate. Itâs not the investing climate in the U.S. where people really think of this as the Wild West.â
The Chinese government appears to be open to the crypto economy in some ways, but regulatory attention from government may create tension.
âWe donât see an outcome there yet â meaning it could go any direction â but there is a lot of tension in the system,â said Sokolin.
Russia, on the other hand, has not been very welcoming to cryptocurrencies with authorities likely to categorize crypto-tokens as legal financial instruments or derivatives in the future. If the government hands down a more formal recognition of cryptocurrencies, they will be subject to KYC and AML regulations, transaction monitoring, and taxes, the report states.
That is not to say the regulators themselves have been averse to the technology. The full report, for example, gives an overview for how the Bank of Russia is moving on its own distributed ledger projects.
For more information, you can download the full report here.
Businessmen on coins image via Shutterstock