With the country’s financial authority designating digital assets as financial goods, South Africa has made a significant advancement in Bitcoin legislation.
The Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act of the nation was revised to incorporate digital assets, according to a notice published by the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA).
The Financial Services and Consumer Protection Act (FSCA) describes a “crypto asset” as a “digital representation of value” that employs distributed ledger technology (DLT). Crypto assets were deemed to be financial products by the agency.
First Step In Digital Asset Regulation
The announcement is an important first step in the nation’s regulation of digital assets. Now that the industry is regulated, regulators will be able to create and put into effect regulations to control it, such as implementing anti-money laundering initiatives and granting licenses to virtual asset service providers (VASPs).
Brent Petersen of Easy Crypto, a platform for exchanging digital assets, described the declaration as the first legal step needed to bring the cryptocurrency asset market under South African law. The general manager of Luno Exchange for Africa, Marius Reitz, agreed with Petersen. He also emphasized how much simpler it will be for investors to choose certified financial advisors thanks to the new classification.
Reitz told Bloomberg that;
“The licensing requirements that will flow from this classification will drive high standards in the industry, particularly in relation to consumer protection, with potential investors easily able to identify those providers that satisfy regulatory requirements. Another key benefit is that it should allow financial advisers to formally advise their clients on crypto investments.”
Regulations Have Been A Long Time Coming
Regulations have long been demanded by South African investors in digital assets. According to some estimations, 15% of South Africa’s 61 million people hold at least one digital asset, reflecting the nation’s continuously increasing appetite for them.
This category of investors has been the target of scams due to the country’s loose rules. The biggest fraud in the country’s cryptocurrency industry was Africrypt, a pyramid scheme created by two brothers that reportedly stole $3.6 billion. One other well-known fraud is Mirror Trading International, a Ponzi scheme that is said to have duped investors in South Africa and elsewhere of $1.7 billion. The largest BTC-related action to yet involved fraud allegations that the CFTC brought against the MTI operator in July.
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