Crypto trading should be regulated, says UK panel

← Go back May 05, 2023

Retail investing in unbacked cryptoassets like Bitcoin should be regulated like gambling because they are highly volatile and have “no intrinsic value,” an influential panel of UK lawmakers said. The Treasury Select Committee, a cross-party group of members of Parliament, “strongly recommended” such treatment for trading of digital tokens in a report published Wednesday. The recommendation, which followed a months-long inquiry into how digital assets should be overseen, runs counter to the government’s February proposal to regulate crypto like traditional financial services. Regulating retail cryptocurrency trading like gambling would also be a departure from how other major jurisdictions treat the asset class. “We are concerned that regulating retail trading and investment activity in unbacked cryptoassets as a financial service will create a ‘halo’ effect that leads consumers to believe that this activity is safer than it is, or protected when it is not,” the report said. Around 10 percent of UK adults hold or have held cryptoassets, the report said, citing data from HM Revenue & Customs. By convention, the government must respond to the report within about two months of publication, but it’s not required to follow the recommendations. Putting investing in Bitcoin on par with betting on sports or in a casino reflects the panel’s view that cryptocurrencies have “no intrinsic value, huge price volatility and no discernible social good,” making them fundamentally different from traditional financial assets, Harriett Baldwin, who chairs the committee, said in a statement. The UK levies steep taxes on the gambling industry to help finance services like advising on how to handle debts and addiction. Gambling businesses must also verify customers’ identities and take measures to prevent money laundering. Cooking oil producer, Zimgold Oil Industries, has the capacity to fully redeem the commercial paper it intends to issue given that its operations constitute cash business commodities that have inelastic demand, leading stockbroking firm EFE Securities has said. Finance and Economic Development Deputy Minister Clemence Chiduwa says local pension funds invest more of their clients’ contributions in infrastructure to drive the implementation of the National Development Strategy 1 (NDS1). Business Reporter Zimbabwean firms, in various sectors of the economy, will take advantage of the Zimbabwe-China Business Forum set for Beijing, China, to identify potential areas of trade between the two countries.

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