Non Cult Crypto News

Non Cult Crypto News

in

CFPB leaves crypto wallets out of ‘Larger Participant’ rule

The agency highlighted consumer and industry comments in a 259-page report detailing the final draft of the “Larger Participants” rule.

COINTELEGRAPH IN YOUR SOCIAL FEED

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), a United States financial regulator, has finalized its rules governing the “Larger Participant” criteria for digital payment platforms and excluded the transfer of crypto assets from the rule.

According to the final rule, digital wallets such as Apple Pay and centralized ‘peer-to-peer’ payment services will still be subject to the rule, which only covers transactions denominated in US dollars. The government agency wrote:

“The Final Rule limits the definition of ‘annual covered consumer payment transaction volume’ to transactions denominated in U.S. dollars. With this clarification, and a corresponding edit to paragraph (b)(3)(i), the larger-participant test in this Final Rule excludes transfers of digital assets — including crypto-assets such as Bitcoin and stablecoins.”

Industry participants such as research-based investment firm Paradigm and pro-crypto nonprofit groups successfully pushed back against the CFPB’s initial iteration of the rule, which included digital asset transactions.

Cover page of the final CFPB rule. Source: CFPB

Related: Stablecoin bill faces several challenges — former Senator Pat Toomey

The CFPB focuses on digital payment services

CFPB began focusing on digital payment services like Apple Pay, Google Pay, and ‘peer-to-peer’ payment platforms like Venmo in September 2023. At the time, the agency cited the potential monopolistic concerns of Big Tech firms pushing out smaller companies in the space.

At the time, Rohit Chopra, director of the CFPB, also cited the monetization of consumer data made available to these companies as another area of concern.

Following the initial announcement, the CFPB proposed supervising crypto wallet providers. However, the oversight extension faced pushback from the crypto industry and lawmakers.

US lawmakers sent a letter to the CFPB in January 2024 pushing back on the rule due to the potential impact on cryptocurrencies. “Peer-to-peer transactions through ‘self-hosted wallets’ is a core component for the digital asset ecosystem, as it eliminates third-party risk,” the lawmakers wrote.

Despite the opposition, the CFPB appeared to double down in April 2024 by targeting blockchain video games due to the ability of in-game asset tokens to trade outside of the gaming ecosystem on electronic exchanges.

Magazine: Deposit risk: What do crypto exchanges really do with your money?

This article first appeared at Cointelegraph.com News

What do you think?

Written by Outside Source

FTX set to begin creditor distributions in early 2025

Mastercard, JPMorgan integrate blockchain payment solutions 

Back to Top

Ad Blocker Detected!

We've detected an Ad Blocker on your system. Please consider disabling it for Non Cult Crypto News.

How to disable? Refresh

Log In

Or with username:

Forgot password?

Don't have an account? Register

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

To use social login you have to agree with the storage and handling of your data by this website.

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.