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Propelled by the ICO boom and the increasing number of applications from the private sector, digital assets and blockchain saw increased interest from regulators in mid 2017. Most countries acknowledged the appeal of digital assets and issued relevant investors warnings. The first state-sponsored studies exploring digital currencies surfaced, accompanied by attempts to regulate the then-popular ICOs. On-chain pilots emerged too, such as the and , that were swiftly shut down by European regulators. In late 2018, studies from top advisor firms such as Deloitte and PWC largely foreshadowed the increased involvement of institutional players, and China’s primacy in the field, all while initiatives from the private sector highlighted financial services as the “killer application”.Over the past 2 years, pilot deployments and dormant legislation gave their place to large scale initiatives. States and super-states are competing on the issuance of DLT versions of their sovereign currencies, issuing umbrella regulation to accommodate their paramount implications for modern economies and financial services. Systematic efforts have been put in place to understand and taxonomize digital assets, and sovereign national strategies in advanced nations are becoming increasingly common. In late 2020 the world stands before a tectonic shift, fueled by the acceleration of digital trends due to the COVID19 pandemic, and the climaxing efforts of states to keep up with developments.In Europe, the European commission has lately a directive that sets the stage for the regulation of digital assets, and a outlining a novel, DLT-enabled Euro. Those are expected to shape continent-wide regulation and treatment of digital assets over the next years. Today, however, the digital asset regulatory landscape remains polymorphous and ambiguous as ever. Some countries have embraced transformative technologies with top-down initiatives, while others have remained to simple investor protection warnings.The European Blockchain Observatory and Forum report on the state of blockchain in the EU introduces a framework for ranking countries on a three-stage regulatory maturity curve, based on their specific characteristics. Stage I describes countries where blockchain and digital assets regulation is generally absent, save perhaps for the occasional investor warnings issued by relevant authorities. Countries falling under Stage II have shown significant sings of involvement in the digital assets field. Those have generally adopted wider regulatory schemes that relate to KYC/AML and investor protection or pertain to specific blockchain enabled activities such as ICOs. State-sponsored studies and pilots are also commonplace for countries in Stage II, as is an established framework for the characteristics and the taxation of digital assets. Lastly, countries under Stage III have adopted specific legislation that pertains to digital assets and have voted, published, or are actively developing a national strategy to exploit them. The UK, France, Cyprus, Malta, Estonia, and Switzerland have set a pan-European example with their embracive and innovation-driven approaches, fall under either stage II or III on the framework and have generally adopted more nuanced approaches indicative of industry trends that are worth outlining.
Regulatory and Ecosystem maturity curve
“We believe that with the implementation of the National Strategy, Cyprus will transform the economy and adopt to new business models, and therefore increase the level of maturity towards disruptive technologies […] In addition, an upcoming DLT and Cryptocurrencies bill contribute towards improving the maturity levels of this technology for Cyprus, and thus, creating an ‘enabling environment’ for technology and FinTech companies to flourish”With a national strategy already in place, Cyprus is now closely monitoring and participating in the pan-European discussion on digital assets and is ready to enact necessary changes to align with European guidelines on their regulation, taxation and general treatment.
Unlike most other countries, Malta’s approach towards digital assets can be characterized as “Regulation First”. In 2018, while addressing the United Nation, then Prime Minister Joseph Muscat presented the country as a “Blockchain Island” and noted that Malta was the first country worldwide to offer clarity in what was previously a “regulatory vacuum”. In the same year, the country had introduced three bills, outlining its comprehensive regulatory framework and establishing its national strategy. The key actors responsible for the trio of laws collectively referred to as the Innovation Framework were: the Malta Digital Innovation Authority(MDIA), the Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA) and the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA). More specifically, the laws approved by the Maltese parliament were (VFAA), with an objective to regulate the field of ICOs, digital assets, virtual currencies and related services, , which aimed to set the framework for the registration of technology service providers in the blockchain space and the certification of smart contracts, and the , which established the MDIA, with a role to certify blockchain deployments and smart contracts.
The MFSA has introduced a test to separate digital assets in four distinct categories based on their characteristics. Those categories are electronic money, financial instruments, virtual tokens and virtual financial assets. Taxation applies depending on which category an asset falls under. Licensing requirements for activities involving blockchain and virtual currencies are also determined according to provisions of the VFAA. Four different types of licences exist, and companies interested in acquiring one need to apply to the MFSA. Activities in the virtual currency and blockchain space are subject to anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorism financing (CTF) rules.In early 2020, the country’s blockchain vision was reimagined and incorporated under the wider umbrella of digital innovations, making Malta one of the first countries to lead the trend of incorporating blockchain and digital assets under a wider transformative technology scope.“It is the effort of individual ministries and government authorities that consider the use of blockchain on a case-by-case basis, rather than an umbrella approach of “blockchain everything”. A [national] strategy can help, but it has to be very well informed, and that is usually the catch.”Florian Marcus Digital Transformation Advisor at e-Estonia told EUBOF.Despite the lack of a unified strategy, local regulators were some of the first movers worldwide. Estonian law recognises virtual currencies as “value represented in digital form that is digitally transferable, preservable, or tradable, and that natural persons or legal persons accept as a payment instrument”. At the same time, to facilitate the 2017/2018 growth of ICOs, The Estonian Financial Supervision and Resolution Authority (EFSA) published guidelines segmenting digital assets into security, payment, charity and utility tokens, and invited ICO issuers to submit their plans for feedback, so they can be informed of any specific regulations that apply to them.Estonia has also issued more than 2,000 “Crypto-licenses” for digital currency exchanges and wallet providers.
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