Friday, August 9, 2024

Stablecoins – a digital version of Swiss bearer savings books


Before anti-money laundering laws arrived in Switzerland, anyone could walk into a Swiss bank and open an account without showing any ID. The bank would then issue you something called a bearer savings book, otherwise known as inhabersparheften or livrets d'épargne au porteur. Ownership of the savings book was considered by the bank to be proof of ownership of the underlying funds in the account. The person who opened the account could keep the book or, if they wanted to, pass it on to someone else without notifying the bank, at which point this second person was now entitled to the underlying funds, who could pass the book on to a third person, etc.

In essence, Swiss banks were issuing their very own version of cash.

As time passed and society's awareness of money laundering grew, usage of Swiss bearer savings books accounts was circumscribed by law. In 1977, banks were required for the first time to identify the initial customer to open the account. Also, anyone who wanted to withdraw over CHF 25,000 had to be identified by the bank. But the savings books still enjoyed a significant degree of anonymity. After account opening and prior to withdrawal, books could continue to circulate without identity checks.

In 2003, the issuance of new bearer savings books was prohibited by the Swiss government. Banks were now required to cancel existing savings books when they were presented to a bank's physical desk. Existing bearer savings books could continue to circulate anonymously from hand to hand, like cash, but thanks to steady cancellations they represented just 0.002% of the total assets held in Swiss bank accounts by 2019.

And so ended the Swiss bearer savings book. In the meantime, however, a similar financial instrument has arrived: the stablecoin.

To get some stablecoins, you need to deposit funds with the issuer, which will identify you upon deposit, but after that the stablecoins are free to circulate in the wild without any sort of checks. You can send them to a friend, and she can send them to a relative overseas, and that relative can transfer them to a drug dealer, and none of these subsequent owners need to show their IDs to the issuer. Stablecoin issuers, much like Swiss banks that once issued bearer savings books, often have no idea who they are dealing with.

So if Swiss bearer savings books have long been prohibited, why are stablecoins allowed to proliferate?

This is exactly the point made last month by FINMA, Switzerland's financial regulator, when it indicated that it will no longer tolerate the anonymous transfer of stablecoins. New guidance states that the identity of anyone holding a stablecoin must be "adequately verified by the issuing institution." So not only yourself, but your friend, her relative, and the drug dealer in the above transaction chain will be required to provide their ID.

To justify its new policy, FINMA appeals to the idea of technological neutrality. My take on technological neutrality is that just because a financial productin this case a payments productappears on a novel medium, or substrate (i.e. a blockchain) doesn't mean it is exempt from the same rules that already apply to equivalent products like bank savings books, which are issued on older substrates. Same function, same regulations.

Up till now, stablecoin issuers like Tether have tried to dodge these identification requirements with the legal fiction that only primary holders of stablecoins (i.e. those who originally deposited funds to get stablecoins) are their customers, and so it is only to this batch of holders that they have a due diligence obligation. Secondary, tertiary, and subsequent holders are not "customers", and so the issuers say they don't need to identify them.

But FINMA isn't buying this argument, and rightly so. All holders, not just primary ones, have a "permanent business relationship" with the issuer, says FINMA, and so everyone must be identified. You can certainly understand why FINMA wants to get ahead of this problem. If regular Swiss banks all see that stablecoins are enjoying special treatment, then they'll all join in on the party by switching over to the new substrate.

FINMA's guidance may not seem like a big deal. There are only two Swiss franc stablecoins to which it applies, and they are both tiny. Bitcoin Suisse's XCHF has under 1 million CHF in circulation, and Centi's CCHF doesn't appear to have much more. (Facebook may have run into an earlier informal version of this rule when FINMA assessed initial versions of its Libra stablecoin.)

But as a respected part of the global regulatory fabric, FINMA could very well be copied by other regulators. More importantly, FINMA is a member of the  Financial Action Task Force, or FATF, an umbrella organization representing the anti-money laundering authorities of 38 major nations. FATF promotes global anti-money laundering standards by blacklisting countries that fail to adopt them. If FINMA's policy on stablecoins is indicative of an emerging FATF approach to stablecoins, then expect it to spread.

The shocking thing to me is that it has taken this long for a major global regulator to issue a concrete ruling on the issue of stablecoin anonymity. It's about time. Standard anti-money laundering practice requires financial institutions to verify who is using their platform. Stablecoin issuers shouldn't get a free ride.

15 comments:

  1. couldn't the title of this post be "Stablecoins - a digital version of cash"? Why should Stablecoins be KYC'd if cash isn't?

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    1. If they could figure out how, they’d KYC cash too.

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    2. "Why should Stablecoins be KYC'd if cash isn't?"

      Cash was originally issued in the 1700s and has been grandfathered into AML frameworks under a unique set of rules. It's almost impossible for an issuer to ID cash users, but fairly simple to ID holders of accounts and stablecoins.

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    3. "To justify its new policy, FINMA appeals to the idea of technological neutrality. My take on technological neutrality is that just because a financial product—in this case a payments product—appears on a novel medium, or substrate (i.e. a blockchain) doesn't mean it is exempt from the same rules that already apply to equivalent products like bank savings books, which are issued on older substrates. Same function, same regulations."

      Ofc, following on from 'technological neutrality' then cash must be identified, regardless of the difficulty. From which, either cash has to be RFID'd on hand to hand exchanges or it has to be gotten rid of.

      Saying it's 'grandfathered' just doesn't work, no matter how much cognitive dissonance FINMA displays...

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    4. I don't think banknotes became widely KYC-able by central banks until quite recently, with ubiquitous adoption of the smart phone. To accept a note from a friend you'd need to have a central bank app on your phone, one you've been approved to use, and scan in the note's serial number. Serial numbers that fall out of the bank's tracking database cease to be usable.

      It was reasonable for banknotes to be treated differently than accounts because notes were the dominant retail payment option at the time that the anti-money laundering apparatus was first devised in the 70s, and the above technical option simply didn't exist.

      We can certainly entertain the idea that notes should no longer deserve to be grandfathered thanks to technology, and should be treated like accounts. But the fact that they continue to be grandfathered for peculiar reasons of history doesn't logically lead to the conclusion that there is something unfair about that system, or that new financial products like stablecoins deserve to be slotted into the same grandfathered position as banknotes. Stablecoins like USDT deserve the same treatment as accounts. That's obvious to me. Cash's treatment is a different topic.

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  2. KYC is only technically possible if properly identified financial intermediaries are major bottlenecks in the transmission of money.

    Until recently, this was the case. Technology now enables entire financial ecosystems to operate without bottlenecks. Being truly decentralized is difficult, but possible today.

    So any attempt to force KYC on blockchain technologies will only work on centralized intermediaries, but not on others.

    Regulating stablecoins will create incentives to create decentralized stablecoins. It's difficult to have currencies that remain at parity with a fiat currency without assets in that currency, but it's possible that a solution will be found.

    If not, other cryptos will be used, and they will be "stablecoins" in the sense that 1 unit of that crypto = 1 unit of that crypto, which will have a variable exchange rate with other currencies, including fiat, like all currencies in the world today.

    Because, I ask you: how do you force KYC on Monero, for example? This crypto is absolutely untraceable, and it can only be mined on CPUs (ASICs aren't possible and GPUs aren't profitable) and miners are therefore thousands of people with normal PCs spread all over the world.

    Technology today makes the idea of KYCing all possible currencies impossible. It's a losing battle, just like the battle of the Catholic Church in the 16th century against the "wild" printers who printed books not authorized by the Church.

    Cut off a head, 10 grow back. And cutting off one head took up a considerable amount of the time, resources and budget of the government agency responsible.

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    1. "...will create incentives to create decentralized stablecoins."

      I have no doubt this will be the case. But decentralized stablecoins will never be as good as centralized ones. They'll have wobbly pegs, like Rai, which damages their usefulness. Bringing out new supply of stablecoins like Rai requires people borrow from the protocol by depositing ETH, but there's never enough people who want to do that, so awkward shortages develop.

      If decentralized stablecoins were genuine replacements for the centralized ones, then they would have already eclipsed Tether and USDC -- but they haven't.

      In short, it's not the case that if you cut off a head, 10 grow back. Rather, a few edgy alternatives will pop up but they won't be serious substitutes.

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    2. Fair enough, but your answer doesn't address other cryptos like Monero. If no decentralized stablecoins can be used, then the people that need decentralized currencies will use decentralized currencies that are not stablecoins.

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    3. I'm not saying decentralized stablecoins can't be used. I'm saying that usage will be slowed down thanks to their inherent defects.

      As for Monero, I doubt anything can be done to get developers to build due diligence into the coin itself. What limits the wide-spread acceptance of Monero is its volatility. It'll never be as user-friendly as a Tether or USDC.

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  3. > In essence, Swiss banks were issuing their very own version of cash.

    Are you an imbecil, author? Where do you think _bank_notes_ came from?

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  4. Say, what is up with this identification or 'papers pleaze' fetishism that the likes of FATF keeps pushing?

    Did they read the old awful biblical story "Mark of the Beast" and thought "oh! oh! Good idea!".

    Btw there was a recentish study on the effectiveness vs cost of AML/KYC and it showed the 'compliance' cost incurred was much much higher than the actual criminality costs and the pitance the authorities reclaimed from successfully stopped criminal enterprise.

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    1. "Btw there was a recentish study on the effectiveness vs cost of AML/KYC and it showed ..."

      I have some thoughts on that:

      https://jpkoning.blogspot.com/2023/08/aml-works-even-if-it-intercepts-less.html

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  5. It's easy to track cash (banknotes) as well:
    Banks could record the serial numbers of the banknotes they put into the ATM. Later on the record which KYC'd bank client fetches those banknotes. Similarly, banks could record every banknote serial number and the bank client who brings them. In today's "big brother watching you" environment, I guess this is already being done. And, if you do that on a large scale and you add a bit of AI reasoning it could provide some interesting information.

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    1. I watched an interview with a certain intelligence whistleblower and he said bill counters photograph each bill’s serial number as it whirls through the machine. I too suspect the type of program you describe is already being done and has been done in some form for many years.

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