FTX proves MiCA should be passed fast, officials tell European Parliament committee
In its latest hearing on FTX, the committee looked to financial officials to assess the impact of FTX’s collapse in Europe and suggest a way forward.
499 Total views
6 Total shares
The European Parliament Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee held a hearing on the “FTX cryptocurrency exchange collapse and implications for the EU” on Nov. 30. Three European monetary officials testified, talking about FTX, blockchain technology and crypto regulation in a “preliminary assessment of the events.”
European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) Risk Analysis & Economics Department Head Steffen Kern told the committee that ESMA “has neither regulated nor supervised FTX” and has no “information on the company beyond what is in the public domain.” The ESMA does not see significant risks to the broader financial sector from the collapse of FTX given the small portion of the total market represented by crypto and the limited connections between crypto and traditional finance.
Kern concluded by saying Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) legislation, due to come into force in 2024, “is tackling the right issues to introduce vital protections for investors and important rules for market participants through a common EU regime.”
— ESMA – EU Securities Markets Regulator (@ESMAComms) November 30, 2022
On questioning, Kern said that FTX (EU) Ltd., which is domiciled in Cyprus, had received a Markets in Financial Instruments Directive license, in spite of the fact that the license is not intended to cover crypto. That license was suspended on Nov. 9.
Related: MiCA proponent cites FTX in advocating for regulation: ‘Crypto assets are not play money’
Member of the European Parliament and MiCA Rapporteur Stefan Berger said of FTX at the hearing, “Basically, it was SBF and a system that depended on him. […] FTX is not the failure of blockchain technology, but the failure and hubris of one person.” He continued:
“I have two political demands: firstly, MiCA has to be passed as quickly as possible. […] Secondly, it would be desirable if a large number of states outside the European Union would take the example from MiCA. A global MiCA would be the best solution.”
Deputy Director eneral of the EU Financial Services, Financial Stability and Capital Markets Union Alexandra Jour-Schroeder told the committee, “Under the MiCA regime, no companies providing cryptoassets in the EU would have been allowed to be organised, perhaps it’s better to say disorganised, in the way FTX reportedly was.”
The committee heard from European Central Bank President Christine Lagrande on Nov. 28. She pointed to the FTX debacle as evidence of the need for additional “MiCA II” legislation.