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Federal Reserve Board outlines next steps for faster payments
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Hong Kong launches regulatory sandbox
3
France moves forward with Blockchain for certain securities exchanges
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Future of FinTech conference London
5
Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank and Abu Dhabi Global Market announce Memorandum of Understanding
6
FinTech in Taiwan: Regulatory Efforts and the Need for Speed
7
Gibraltar issues statement on initial coin offerings
8
Marketplace lender seeking fair lending guidance receives CFPB’s first no-action letter
9
What you need to know about capital raising with ICOs (Business Bytes video)
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ASIC releases its guidance on ICOs

Federal Reserve Board outlines next steps for faster payments

By Eric A. Love

The Federal Reserve Board (FRB) has released a paper entitled “Strategies for Improving the U.S. Payment System: Next Steps in the Payments Improvement Journey” (the Strategies Paper).  The Strategies Paper builds upon the FRB’s “first steps” for enhancing the U.S. payment system (which were described in a 2015 FRB paper) and details the next phase of this work.  It includes an assessment of ambitious proposals made by the Faster Payments Task Force and the Secure Payments Task Force.

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Hong Kong launches regulatory sandbox

By Jonathan Lawrence

The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) launched a regulatory sandbox on 29 September. The sandbox provides a confined regulatory environment for qualified firms to operate regulated activities under the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Ordinance (SFO) before FinTech is used on a fuller scale to the wider public. The SFC emphasises the importance of the integrity of the market and investors’ interests, and says it will not compromise regulatory requirements which are key to investor protection. For example, a qualified firm operating in the sandbox must be fit and proper and must comply with the applicable financial resources requirements.

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France moves forward with Blockchain for certain securities exchanges

By Claude-Étienne Armingaud and Emilie Oberlis

Following the adoption of Act no.2016-1691, dated 9 December 2016, on Transparency, Anti-Corruption, and Modernization of Economic Life (“Sapin II” – see our compliance coverage here) and the publication of its responses to a public consultation request on 30 August 2017 (see our coverage here), the French Ministry of Finance published a draft document aimed at adapting the French legal framework to the use of blockchain technology.

The draft (which may be accessed in French here) addresses the possibility for companies, to register the following instruments with a “shared electronic registry”:

  • Negotiable debt securities;
  • Units or shares of undertakings for collective investment;
  • Capital securities issued by corporations and debt securities other than negotiable debt securities, provided that they are not traded on a trading platform.

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Future of FinTech conference London

By Jonathan Lawrence

At the Telegraph Future of FinTech conference in London on 28 September several regulatory-related themes emerged:

  • There will soon be more money outside the regulated environment rather than inside, the tipping point is approaching
  • Currencies are no longer the sole domain of sovereign countries and regulated central banks
  • Some regulators are competing to attract the industry to their jurisdiction and are generally agnostic about the technology used to deliver the financial service
  • Open Banking in the UK from 13 January 2018 will usher in a new era of transparency across a UK customer’s whole financial life
  • Brexit is not a major focus for the UK FinTech industry or its regulators, the biggest challenge is acquiring talent
  • Using vehicles such as IOSCO to promote regulator cooperation and cross-border regulation for FinTech; genuine common standards are a goal
  • Financial regulators in many countries are struggling to keep up with the industry due to high workload on other issues and limited resources
  • Talent is flowing between the industry and regulators
  • Artificial intelligence, blockchain, PropTech and ICOs were identified as the “hot” areas

Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank and Abu Dhabi Global Market announce Memorandum of Understanding

By Jonathan Lawrence

On 25 September, Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM), the international financial centre (IFC) in Abu Dhabi, via its Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA), announced a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank (ADIB). The aim of the MoU is to seek opportunities to collaborate and consult on initiatives to promote the growth and development of the FinTech ecosystem in Abu Dhabi and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Under its terms, ADIB will partner with the FSRA across a range of Islamic-compliant FinTech-related initiatives. This partnership adds to ADGM’s FinTech commitment through the Abu Dhabi Regulatory Laboratory (RegLab) — a regulatory framework that offers a controlled environment for FinTech innovators to develop and test their products and services with the regulator.

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FinTech in Taiwan: Regulatory Efforts and the Need for Speed

By Joseph P.Y. Tseng

To encourage financial services industry and the related industry to apply innovative technology for enhancing financial accessibility, practicability, and quality, on May 4, 2017, Taiwan’s Executive Yuan proposed the bill called “Financial Technology Innovation Experimentation Act” (the “Bill”) to create its version of “regulatory sandbox.” It would enable experimenting innovative financial technology within a well-defined space and duration under relaxed legal requirements.

To read our full alert, click here.

Gibraltar issues statement on initial coin offerings

By Jonathan Lawrence

The Gibraltar Financial Services Commission (GFSC) issued a statement on initial coin offerings on 22 September. The GFSC has noticed the increasing use of tokens or coins based on Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT) as a means of raising finance, especially by early-stage start-ups. The sale of such tokens is often conducted using terms such as initial coin offering (ICO), token sale, initial token offering and the like.

A new regulatory framework for DLT will become operational in Gibraltar as from January 2018 and will regulate the activities of firms, operating in or from Gibraltar, that use DLT to store or transmit value belonging to others, such as virtual currency exchanges. Gibraltar is considering a complementary regulatory framework covering the promotion and sale of tokens, aligned with the DLT framework. In common with regulators around the world, the GFSC says that is continuing to monitor the use of unregulated tokens as a means of raising finance.

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Marketplace lender seeking fair lending guidance receives CFPB’s first no-action letter

By David D. Christensen, Jennifer Janeira Nagle and Brandon R. Dillman

The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) recently issued its first no-action letter, pursuant to a policy designed to encourage innovation in the fintech marketplace by creating a testing ground for new technologies. If received, a no-action letter simply indicates that the CFPB “has no present intention to recommend initiation of an enforcement or supervisory action” against the applicant with respect to the specific product and regulatory concerns at issue.

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What you need to know about capital raising with ICOs (Business Bytes video)

There is a lot of noise surrounding capital raising with Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs) and there are updates almost daily from regulators around the globe. For instance, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) released their views on ICOs today (see ‘ASIC releases its guidance on ICOs‘), while China has recently banned this new form of capital raising.

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ASIC releases its guidance on ICOs

By Jim Bulling and Felix Charlesworth

On 28 September 2017, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) released Information Sheet 225 which provides its view on initial coin offerings (ICOs) and their application in relation to the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth).

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