Stay in the know
We’ll send you the latest insights and briefings tailored to your needs
The spectres of money laundering and terrorism funding have haunted cryptocurrencies, and in particular Bitcoin, since they exploded out of relative obscurity a few years ago. Regulators around the world are now working out how to effectively regulate the trade of cryptocurrencies and how to adapt anti-money laundering rules to this new digital frontier. In this piece, Tony Joyner and Natasha Blycha consider recent changes to Australian anti-money laundering and counter terrorism financing laws.
Money laundering risks arise naturally in cryptocurrency transactions because the individual users of the technology - called distributed ledger technology, or DLT - can be difficult to track. Peer-to-peer transactions outside of the regulated financial system have, as you would expect, limited transparency. To compound this, transactions of this nature can readily cross international borders, and into jurisdictions with the least oversight.
Against this background, Australia has taken a decisive step to tackle the issue under broad new anti-money laundering and counter terrorism financing (AML/CTF) laws. Previously, the Australian AML/CTF rules had only applied to e-currency (that is, digital ‘currency’ supported by a physical thing), and did not apply to convertible digital currencies (supported by an intangible cryptographic algorithm; ie, not a physical thing). Now, the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Amendment Act 2017 (Amending Act) amends the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (AML/CTF Act) to extend the coverage of this regulation to include convertible digital currencies, though regulation of digital currency exchanges (DCEs).
These changes came into effect on 3 April 2018.
The Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC) administers the AML/CTF Act. It has now published guidance to assist with the implementation of the amendments. From 3 April 2018, transitional arrangements will apply to existing and new DCEs. Criminal and civil consequences for providing DCE services while unregistered will apply from 14 May 2018.
In brief, the new approach requires registration of DCEs on a new Digital Currency Exchange Register (DCE register). It also imposes compliance obligations on DCEs, which include:
For now, the registration requirements only apply to DCEs where transactions involve fiat to cryptocurrency (fiat/crypto) trades, and not cryptocurrency to cryptocurrency trades (crypto/crypto). It is also only fiat/crypto transactions that involve physical currency not less than AUD$10,000 that will trigger transaction reporting obligations. Given that transactions on DCEs rarely involve physical currency, for now, this will not be an onerous obligation. We note the rules have provision to expand the scope of the obligations. We watch this space with interest.
Entities that wish to register a DCE must complete an application by providing:
On registration, AUSTRAC can impose conditions on the registration of DCE provider. These conditions may relate to (without limitation):
Amendments have also been made to the suspicious matter and threshold transaction reporting sections of the AML/CTF Act.
As part of this, transactions of a DCE must include specific digital currency reporting identifiers.
In addition, DCEs that identify suspicious transfers or threshold transactions involving digital currency must provide the following information to AUSTRAC:
In the rapidly developing world of cryptocurrency, the Australian AML/CTF regulation will likely be seen as a welcome addition by many proponents of the technology. Notwithstanding that the legislation creates new obligations in launching and operating a DCE, that regulation creates greater certainty around the government’s approach, and assists in improving both public and institutional perception of the digital currency sector’s legitimacy.
We’ll send you the latest insights and briefings tailored to your needs