The Financial Planning Association of Australia (FPA) has shown its support for the โcrypto rule bookโ idea and called for regulating exchanges instead of crypto assets.
In May, the Australian Law Reform Council (ALRC) proposed to tackle crypto regulation through a rule book-style framework which sets out a series of gradually updated compliance principles for local crypto firms to adhere to.
The comments came via a submission to the Treasury by FPAโs head of policy, strategy and innovation, Ben Marshan, who also argued that the regulation of crypto exchanges should fall under the current financial services regime and not under a new separate legal framework.
โFirstly, it would create an alternate, duplicate regulatory regime to regulate what at the core is the purchase and holding of a financial asset to either retail or wholesale investors.โ
โSecondly, it would require existing financial service licensees to apply for and hold a separate type of license, adding to cost and regulatory duplication,โ he added.
Mashan also emphasized a need to roll out greater consumer protections for local Australian crypto users and highlighted that regulating secondary providers (crypto exchanges, brokers etc.) is the best way to do this.
โThe regulation of a financial product or service should not depend on the technology which underlies the asset,โ he said, adding that โit would be virtually impossible to regulate the product because itโs so decentralized, theyโre in all sorts of foreign jurisdictions.โ
Focusing regulation on crypto service providers will remove a lot of โcomplexityโ from the equation given the rapidly evolving nature of blockchain tech and crypto, argued Mashan, adding that the ALRCโs crypto rule book idea for firms to follow โmakes sense.โ
โIt makes it a lot easier because instead of having to work your way through thousands of pages of the Corporations Act people can go to a specific section, and itโs much more efficient.โ
Speaking with Cointelegraph, Ryan Parsons, the co-CEO of local crypto exchange Swyftx,ย echoed the calls from Mashan and noted that his firm wants to see โsensible measures that support consumer protectionsโ enacted soon so that Australia doesnโt risk falling behind the United States and European Union:
โOur preference is for crypto platforms to operate within the existing financial services licensing framework, albeit in a way that accounts for the unique characteristics of digital assets.โ
โWe think this is the best way to reduce complexity and cost, as well as build confidence in crypto as an asset class among Australian investors,โ he added.
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Another key idea highlighted in the ALRCโs report was to introduce the Twin Peaks regulatory model, in which regulation is split between one entity that is tasked with overseeing the maintenance of financial system stability while the other takes care of institutional market conduct and consumer protection.
The same model is used in Australiaโs financial regulatory system, with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) in charge of good market conduct and consumer protection, while the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) is responsible for financial system stability.
Since the Liberal party was emphatically booted out of government in May, the regulatory landscape of crypto in Australia has become uncertain as the Labor party appears to have other fish to fry.
As it stands, Labor is yet to provide any concrete initiatives but has outlined that introducing greater consumer protections in crypto will be a key area of focus.