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Column-Crypto regulators may see 10% household exposure as high



© Reuters. Representations of cryptocurrency Bitcoin plunge into water in this illustration taken, May 23, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

By Mike Dolan

LONDON (Reuters) – Whatever the broader financial or economic stability risks of volatile crypto tokens, government watchdogs may reasonably balk at 10% household exposure to loosely-regulated speculative punts that double or halve in value every 6 months.

So far this year the leading crypto ‘currencies’ such as and Ether have dropped 40-50% and there’s been an earthquake in the parallel ‘stablecoin’ world of supposedly pegged tokens that act as links from regular finance to the twilight zone of crypto, or ‘decentralised’, finance.

Another typical year in the nether regions of finance? Caveat emptor, some might say.

But the latest twists touched another nerve among governments and central banks who fear they’ve let this ecosystem get out of hand without proper oversight or adequate transparency to reach levels beyond which they may find it difficult to control or shore up.

G7 finance chiefs meeting in Germany late last week cited the crypto turmoil and urged its Financial Stability Board “to advance the swift development and implementation of consistent and comprehensive regulation.”

French central bank chief Francois Villeroy de Galhau reinforced the message this week and upped the urgency at the World Economic Forum in Davos, warning of lax investment protection as well as money laundering risks.

“It’s an emergency question now… I strongly hope we will have this regulation in Europe this year,” Villeroy said.

While still relatively small compared to stocks, bonds or real estate, two surveys released this week from the U.S. Federal Reserve and European Central Bank show that at least 10% of all households in both regions have dabbled in crypto as an investment over 2021.

The Fed’s annual “Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking” report polled 11,000 adults late last year and painted a relative picture of rude health for consumer finances overall – conducted though it was before one of the worst starts to a year in more than 20 years.

Asking about cryptocurrency for the first time, the survey found 12% of adults used or held cryptocurrency for investment in the previous 12 months. Less than 3% had any reason to use it for payment or remittance purposes.

While this might pale against estimates of just over 50% of U.S. households holding stocks for saving or retirement, it’s likely an uncomfortably large share for governments who see these tokens as having little or no use or value longer term and who fret about financial sharks burning inexperienced savers.

And if, as some estimate, a majority of those holding the tokens arrived over the past year and are underwater at levels over $30,000 or less, then damage limitation may be the first task of watchdogs and governments.

ECB chief Christine Lagarde, for one, said this week that Bitcoin and the hundreds of other…



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