Thailand to ban use of digital assets as payments

Bloomberg

Thailand will bar the use of cryptocurrencies as a means of payments for goods and services, saying the wider use of digital assets threatens the nation’s financial system and economy.
Business operators — including crypto exchanges — must not provide such payment services, and are barred from acting in a manner that promotes the use of digital assets to pay for goods or services, the Securities and Exchange Commission said in a statement on Wednesday. However, the new regulation won’t affect trading or investments in digital assets, the agency said.
While the restrictions on use of digital currencies for transactions will be effective starting April 1, companies in Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy will have until the end of April to comply with the new rules, the regulator said. It said the curbs on cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin for commercial transactions are in line with regulations in Europe, the UK, South Korea and Malaysia.
Thailand’s crackdown on digital assets comes as individuals — especially young investors — boost their crypto trading in search of better returns amid the country’s economic slowdown. Commercial banks have been cautioned against direct involvement in trading of digital assets due to high volatility, uncertainty and risk.
The development of any unit of pricing other than the Thai baht will increase the cost of economic activities and reduce the efficiency of monetary policy transmission, the regulator said. In the event of a liquidity crisis, the Bank of Thailand will not be able to provide assistance to various financial institutions in forms other than the baht, it said.
Thai regulators recognise the benefits of technologies such as blockchain and was one of the first countries in the world to enact a law to support digital assets business, the SEC said. The Bank of Thailand (BOT) is on course to begin a pilot project for its planned retail digital currency in the fourth quarter.
BOT Governor Sethaput Suthiwartnarueput has touted the central bank digital currency as more effective in achieving financial inclusion in Thailand without imperiling the financial system stability. The monetary authority’s experiment with a wholesale CBDC had already helped lower cross-border transaction costs and increase efficiency, he said in December.
Under the new rules, digital-asset service providers are required to halt advertising, soliciting or establishing a system to facilitate payment of goods and services via digital wallets. Business operators must warn clients against the use of digital assets for payments and may cancel their accounts if they are found breaching the rules, it said.
The value of digital assets held by Thais has soared to 114.5 billion baht ($3.4 billion) from 9.6 billion baht a couple of years ago, the government said in January.
The average daily turnover has jumped to 4.8 billion baht from 240 million baht, with the number of active trading accounts swelling to 1.98 million from 170,000 before the pandemic.

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