Averted a year ago, controversial transaction monitoring rule is back on Treasury’s radar

Share This Post

The Treasury will consider imposing KYC regulations on transactions involving self-custodied wallets.

As the Department of the Treasury has announced its regulatory agenda for the fiscal year earlier today, many in the web3 space have likely experienced flashbacks to December 2020, when the agency had first proposed to impose know your customer, or KYC, rules on transactions that involve self-custodied crypto wallets.

The Treasury’s semiannual agenda and regulatory plan, a document that is meant to inform the public of the department’s ongoing rulemaking activities includes and encourage public feedback, features a clause entitled “Requirements for certain transactions involving convertible virtual currency or digital assets.”

Ascribed to the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, it proposes to require banks and money service businesses to “submit reports, keep records, and verify the identity of customers” in relation to transactions with funds held in unhosted wallets.

In FinCEN parlance, unhosted (also known as self-hosted) wallets are those that are not controlled by an intermediary financial institution or service. Users of such wallets “interact with a virtual currency system directly and have independent control over the transmission of the value.”

The rule proposed in Dec. 2020 would have required registered cryptocurrency exchanges to collect personal details of their customers transacting with an unhosted wallet if the value of the transaction exceeded $3,000. A person sending funds from an exchange account to their private wallet would fall within the scope of the rule.

Introduced in the waning days of Secretary Steven Mnuchin’s office, the rule was scrapped amid massive pushback from the industry.

At the time, Mnuchin said that the rule addressed “substantial national security concerns” associated with the cryptocurrency market. The resurgence of the agency’s focus on self-hosted wallets measure could have to do with the “crypto as a national security threat” focus of the executive order that the Biden administration is reportedly preparing.

Still, mentioning a rule on the Treasury’s semiannual agenda does not mean that it will necessarily be adopted.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Crypto Market Prediction 2025: Galaxy Research’s Bold Insights on Bitcoin, DeFi, and Stablecoins

The post Crypto Market Prediction 2025: Galaxy Research’s Bold Insights on Bitcoin, DeFi, and Stablecoins appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News Galaxy Research has shared its year-ending big

Millions in SOL at Stake: Solana Co-Founder Hit With Fraud Lawsuit by Ex-Wife

Stephen Akridge, a co-founder of blockchain platform Solana, faces a lawsuit from his ex-wife, Elisa Rossi, alleging he misappropriated millions in solana (SOL) token profits Rossi claims Akridge

Is Bitcoin Ending 2024 On A High Note? Analysts Say This Level Is Key

As Bitcoin (BTC) continues to move sideways, investors wonder whether the flagship crypto will end the year positively or on a sour note Some analysts suggest a close above recently lost levels could

South Korean Court Jails Bithumb CEO and Golfer in Crypto Bribery Scandal

The post South Korean Court Jails Bithumb CEO and Golfer in Crypto Bribery Scandal appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News A South Korean court has sentenced a celebrity golfer and the former CEO of

Squid Game Token on Base Blockchain Loses 99% Value: Investors Beware

The post Squid Game Token on Base Blockchain Loses 99% Value: Investors Beware appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News PeckShield has reported a token that manipulates the ‘Squid Game’ name,

Sheila Warren’s X Account Hacked Amid Resignation, Promotes Fake Token

The post Sheila Warren’s X Account Hacked Amid Resignation, Promotes Fake Token appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News The Crypto Council for Innovation CEO Sheila Warren lost her X account to