BoE deputy gov: regulators should pursue crypto as a 'matter of urgency'
Jon Cunliffe, the deputy governor at the Bank of England for financial stability, said the risks of a growing crypto market on the financial system are “relatively limited” at the moment, but have the potential to grow very rapidly if regulators do not keep pace.
In a speech to the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication on Oct. 13, Cunliffe said policymakers around the world have only just started to develop the framework needed to properly regulate digital assets, but they should pursue it “as a matter of urgency.” The deputy governor spoke about the risks cryptocurrencies and stablecoins may pose when connected to traditional financial systems through individuals, financial institutions, hedge funds, and banks.
Given how digital assets are continuing to work their way into these institutions, sentiment over crypto volatility and otherwise could cause “investors to sell other assets that are judged to be risky.” Cunliffe referred to the interconnectedness of crypto and traditional finance as having the potential for a shock “transmitted through the financial system” if something were to go wrong.
One of the scenarios that Cunliffe posed was if the price of an unbacked cryptoasset were to fall to zero. In addition, price volatility — even seemingly among major cryptocurrencies — “could trigger margin calls on crypto positions forcing leveraged investors to find cash to meet them, leading to the sale of other assets and generating spillovers to other markets.”
“Financial stability risks currently are relatively limited but they could grow very rapidly if, as I expect, this area continues to develop and expand at pace,” said Cunliffe. “How large those risks could grow will depend in no small part on the nature and on the speed of the response by regulatory and supervisory authorities.”
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Cunliffe has previously argued that England’s central bank should “issue public digital money that can meet the needs of modern day life,” implying a digital pound may be in the BoE’s future. He is currently co-chairing a task force set up by the U.K. government to explore the rollout of a central bank digital currency.