The Global Financial Markets Association (GFMA), which counts the likes of JPMorgan and Deutsche Bank as members, issued a letter opposing Basel Committee’s new crypto rules on September 20.
Basel Committee, which is made up of global regulators and central bank governors, has suggested that banks should set aside funds equivalent to each unit of their crypto holdings.
Banking regulators have repeatedly urged caution on cryptocurrencies and their use in money laundering and terrorism financing. However, trade associations argue that the new ruleset would prevent banks from holding digital assets, which would encourage the growth of unregulated entities in the system.
For its part, the Basel Committee maintains that Bitcoin’s interaction with banks “could increase risks to global financial stability if capital requirements are not introduced.” In June, the committee stated that banks should apply a 1,250% risk weight to bitcoin, which it believes is “similar in effect to the deduction of the asset from the capital."
Christine Lagarde, the president of the European Central Bank (ECB) -- which is also a member of the Basel Committee -- recently said that cryptos are not currencies. She added that they are “highly speculative, suspicious occasionally, and high intensity in terms of energy consumption.”