Stablecoin Issuers, Conglomerates Targeted by IMF After Crypto's 'Rough Year'

A ‘rough year’ for crypto markets has underlined the need for comprehensive and consistent regulation of the sector, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has said, suggesting stablecoin issuers and crypto conglomerates need to have bank-style capital requirements.

In its Global Financial Stability Report published Tuesday, the IMF joins the standard-setters at the Financial Stability Board in calling for consistent international regulation of the cryptocurrency sector after a year that has seen a number of collapses of major exchanges and crypto-linked banks.

“The collapse of multiple entities in the crypto asset ecosystem has again made the call more urgent for comprehensive and consistent regulation and adequate supervision” focused on protecting consumers and corporate governance, the report said.

The report added that regulations should cover crypto storage, transfer, exchange, and custody of reserves, with extra prudential requirements for those carrying out multiple functions and for the issuers of stablecoins – tokens that seek to maintain their value versus fiat currencies.

The report cites a “rough year for crypto,” in which the collapse of crypto- and tech-heavy lenders Silvergate, Signature and Silicon Valley Banks followed from the bankruptcy of FTX in November. “These events add to questions about the viability of digital assets and reinforce the need for appropriate regulation,” the IMF said.

The IMF’s report followed a warning issued earlier Tuesday by the European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB) that financial authorities need to be able to monitor crypto leverage, decentralized finance and crypto staking and lending.“

"Crypto-assets have experienced exponential growth in recent years, and the future development path of this market is uncertain,” said a statement by the ESRB, a watchdog chaired by the European Central Bank’s Christine Lagarde.

The Financial Stability Board, a grouping of international regulators, is due to issue its own crypto rules in July, and its chair Klaas Knot has already said many existing stablecoins would be unlikely to meet its strictures. Many traditional finance players want to see curbs on crypto conglomerates, as the mixing of different financial functions could lead to conflicts of interest, despite concerns about constraining innovation.

The IMF’s Executive Board has previously expressed concerns over the potential of crypto to usurp the role of legal tender, though it stopped short of calling for an outright ban on digital assets.

Read more: IMF Board 'Generally Agreed' Crypto Shouldn't Be Legal Tender