The South African Reserve Bank (SARB) is moving forward with a recommendation to let banks deal with companies handling crypto assets.
The new guidelines published by the bank says the banks can now act as a “conduit” for funds from crypto asset service providers, and can deal with customers willing to purchase or receive payments in that way.
It comes as some banks in the area had previously cut off their relationships with crypto companies due to the risks, and the greater possibility of crypto being used to launder money or violate sanctions. SARB found this to be an overcorrection, writing that the banks can sensibly look into the risk of a crypto company and decide on an individual basis whether to do business with them, rather than blanket-banning all of them.
SARB said it thought there was a threat to financial integrity from the “wholesale termination” of relationships with those crypto companies.
“Risk assessment does not necessarily imply that institutions should seek to avoid risk entirely,” the SARB said.
The regulation of cryptocurrency companies has been a hot-button topic around the globe, with the question of risk and volatility informing everything going on.
Read more: New Fed Guidelines Seen Helping Crypto Companies Gain Access to Central Banking System
PYMNTS wrote recently that the Federal Reserve has released new guidelines for institutions holding crypto in the U.S. to potentially get “master accounts” with the central bank.
The press release from the central bank’s board of governors didn’t specifically reference crypto, but it did say that any new requests for access to Fed accounts and payment services would now be reviewed with a “transparent and risk-based” set of factors.
There has been much debate over the regulation of digital assets, with Fed Vice Chair Lael Brainard saying earlier in the year that there should be more such regulations before the industry got big enough to incur more risks.
For all PYMNTS crypto coverage, subscribe to the daily Crypto Newsletter.
——————————
NEW PYMNTS SURVEY FINDS 3 IN 4 CONSUMERS WITH STRONG DEMAND FOR SUPER APPS

About: The findings in PYMNTS’ new study, “The Super App Shift: How Consumers Want To Save, Shop And Spend In The Connected Economy,” a collaboration with PayPal, analyzed the responses from 9,904 consumers in Australia, Germany, the U.K. and the U.S. and showed strong demand for a single multifunctional super apps rather than using dozens of individuals ones.
As food prices skyrocket and consumers become increasingly anxious about the looming recession, many are cutting back on unnecessary food spending, shifting…
It’s fair to say that when it comes to turning the promise of blockchain into the reality of blockchain, catching up with…
When your consumers skew digital and your major vendors go direct to consumer (D2C), the store and mall formats that have worked…
You have successfully joined our subscriber list.
© 2022 What’s Next Media and Analytics

source

Write A Comment

Your article is loading
Exit mobile version