Financial Sector Conduct Authority in South Africa To Provide Regulatory Clarity in 2022

2021-12-13 15:30

South Africans can expect more clarity surrounding how to trade major cryptocurrencies in 2022, as FSCA seeks to protect retail investors from scams.

In the light of two infamous cryptocurrency scams that have their roots in South Africa and the increasing interest in cryptocurrency, the Financial Sector Conduct Authority, the prudential authority, and the financial surveillance body will table new regulations in early 2022 to protect retail investors. The rules will include guidelines on trading XRP, Litecoin, and Ethereum. The FSCA sees cryptocurrencies as digital assets, not currencies.

Unathi Kamlana, the FSCA commissioner, said that the best advice he can give to retail investors would be to closely follow the unfolding of plans by the South African Reserve Bank to create its own Central Bank Digital Currency. In the meantime, due to the FSCA taking the view of an asset rather than a currency, Kamlana does not see it as a direct threat to financial stability in the country.

South Africans dabbling in crypto

According to data released by the global cryptocurrency exchange Luno, 15% of South Africans hold crypto, while a survey conducted by the Financial Mail pegs that number at around 25%. The amounts invested by these South Africans lie between ZAR 100 (~USD6) and ZAR 1000(~USD62), implying dabbling more than a serious investment.  Forty-four percent of respondents to the survey have concerns around aspects of crypto that they don’t understand.

Two infamous South African scams that rocked Crypto World

The Africrypt scam saw $3.6B stolen in an alleged hack from a company run by Raees and Ameer Cajee. The brothers were offering a 10% per month return on crypto investments. South Africa’s Hanekom Attorneys, who were investigating the hack on behalf of clients believe that the Cajee brothers were part of a larger syndicate. Two mysterious individuals have since offered to resurrect the company and return a percentage of the lost funds to investors.

The Mirror Trading International company was accused of running a Ponzi scheme and offering unrealistic returns on bitcoin investments. The transaction database was hacked by a group called Anonymous ZA, which drew attention to suspicious activities. The FSCA subsequently raided the MTI offices, and the homes of two shareholders in October 2020, while the CEO disappeared in Dec. 2020.

The final order for the liquidation of company assets was handed down in June 2021, and liquidators updated South Africans on the issue in a statement on Nov. 11, 2021. It was reported that ZAR 1.1B (~$68M) in cryptocurrencies and assets had been recovered. The recovered assets included three properties owned by Johann Steynberg, the MTI CEO, cryptocurrency, silver, and two Jaguar vehicles belonging to Steynberg.

What do you think about this subject? Write to us and tell us!

The post Financial Sector Conduct Authority in South Africa To Provide Regulatory Clarity in 2022 appeared first on BeInCrypto.

Similar to Notcoin - TapSwap on Solana Airdrops In 2024

origin »

South African Rand (ZAR) на Currencies.ru

$ 0 (+0.00%)
Объем 24H $0
Изменеия 24h: 0.00 %, 7d: 0.00 %
Cегодня L: $0 - H: $0
Капитализация $0 Rank 99999
Доступно / Всего 0 ZAR

south clarity 2022 financial authority regulatory sector

south clarity → Результатов: 13


South Korea Is Trialing Blockchain Voting — Here’s What That Means

South Korea will test out a new blockchain voting system this month, sources close to the developments have confirmed to Bitcoin Magazine. Developed by the country’s National Election Commission (NEC) and its Ministry of Science and ICT, the distributed ledger system is based on IBM’s Hyperledger Fabric and will be used to authenticate voters and save voting results in real time.

2018-12-4 21:41


South Korea’s National Policy Committee Calls for ICO Regulatory Framework Clarity

Min Byung-Doo, South Korea's National Policy Committee Chair has called for the creation of a regulatory framework for the legalization of initial coin offerings (ICOs). The Committee Chair said with token sales becoming a global trend he does not want the country to ignore the issue or close the door to ICO completely, reports CoinDesk […]

2018-10-2 21:27


Фото:

Are Cryptocurrency Research Centers in South Korea the Next Step Towards Mass Adoption?

Industry-specific research centers have begun opening in South Korea, aiming to provide comprehensive analyses of the cryptocurrency market conditions in the country and abroad.   Adoption Through Clarity And Protection Local media Business Korea reports that specialized cryptocurrency research centers have started to launch in South Korea.

2018-7-31 02:00