ING Bank-Led Security Token-Focused Project Pyctor Was Selected by UK's FCA for its Regulatory Sandbox

Pyctor, a digital asset project led by ING Bank, in collaboration with ABN AMRO, BNP Paribas Securities Services, Invesco US, Société Générale – Forge, State Street, and others, was selected to be part of the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) regulatory sandbox.

The ING-led project was chosen by the United Kingdom’s FCA as one of the businesses selected for Cohort 6 of its regulatory sandbox. Other applications received by the FCA were firms looking to operate in the retail banking, payments, and retail lending sectors.

Pcytor is described as a decentralized permissioned network that aims to “provide digital asset safekeeping and transaction services, with a focus on regulated security tokens issued either on private or public blockchain.”

The UK FCA stated in its announcement that it will be working with the chosen firms closely and test parameters and build in appropriate consumer safeguards. The FCA report added:

“We have an ongoing commitment to encourage and support innovation in the interest of consumers in financial services through – amongst other initiatives – the regulatory sandbox. We want to support innovators in the fintech sector who are under pressure because of the conditions created by coronavirus.”

ING Develops Travel Rule Protocol for Tracking Crypto Transfers

ING Bank has recently developed a new protocol to assist crypto exchanges and companies dealing in digital assets to adhere to the Financial Action Task Force’s Travel Rule requirements.

The new solution, the Travel Rule Protocol (TRP), developed by ING is also backed by Standard Chartered Bank, Fidelity Digital Assets, and Bitgo, and other firms in the crypto industry. 

A source close to ING allegedly said that ING is not currently looking at dealing in cryptocurrencies, but will be focusing on security tokens and similar products. 

Although ING does not seem like it is joining the crypto ecosystem, ING is no stranger to blockchain. ING is one of the founding members of Contour, a blockchain-based trade finance platform built on R3 Corda.

Binance Follows Bybit in Appointing Top Compliance Official

Maxwell Baucus, former U.S. senator and ambassador to China, has joined Binance. The top official will become policy advisor and government liaison to the exchange. Given Baucus’s influence in US political circles, the move should support Binance’s expansion efforts within North America, where its Binance US platform operates.

Curiously, news of the appointment comes two days after Bybit revealed a similar appointment, hiring Daniel Lim to lead its legal and compliance team. Lim formerly served as head of legal and compliance for Singapore-based investment bank Daiwa Capital Markets. Two of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges making similar appointments in the same week suggests the market is gravitating towards a more compliant framework as crypto goes mainstream.

Former Chinese Ambassador Joins Binance

Like Binance, Maxwell Baucus maintains close ties with China, where the experienced official served as US ambassador between 2014 and 2017. With a 40-year career prior to that as a senator representing the state of Montana, Baucus has been around the block. Now he’s entering the world of blockchain for the first time, where he will work with Binance’s existing compliance team to facilitate expansion into new territories and approve new products.

Crypto products such as derivatives can only be offered to certain investor groups in some countries. In the US, meanwhile, crypto exchanges must apply for licensing on a state-by-state basis, further complicating the process of obtaining regulatory approval.

While Baucus may be new to crypto, he’s no stranger to financial innovation, and understands the global markets better than most. As a senator, he chaired the Committee on Finance, whose duties included overseeing trade agreements. In a statement, Baucus spoke of crypto having the potential to power “a revolution in how money is managed leading to a fairer and more equitable financial world.”

Bybit Beats Binance to the Punch

Binance’s announcement following hot on the heels of a similar missive from Bybit is likely coincidental, but it’s nevertheless instructive. On March 9, Bybit disclosed the news that Daniel Lim has joined its team, with CEO Ben Zhou explaining that “Daniel will help bolster Bybit’s compliance posture in a fast-changing regulatory environment and sustain our ambition to build trust and provide value for clients around the globe.”

That sounds very similar to what Binance is hoping to achieve through its appointment of Maxwell Baucus. Lim has had an illustrious career of his own, with his role at Daiwa Capital preceded by a decade as senior legal counsel at Dutch bank ABN AMRO. Lim has also worked for HSBC, so has a deep understanding of the banking sector and how it intersects with crypto.

Crypto has come a long way from the wild west days of Mt. Gox, Btc-e, and other first-generation exchanges that lacked suitable fiat onramps, let alone KYC. Back then, the crypto market was so small that regulators could afford to ignore it. Today, crypto has become too large to overlook. Rather than fight it, however, forward-thinking regulators in many countries are choosing to work with crypto exchanges and payment processors, to develop a framework that will support compliance without stifling innovation or neutering crypto’s entire value proposition.

With experienced counsel taking up senior roles in Binance and Bybit respectively, crypto appears to be creeping closer to an era of greater regulatory clarity and broader mainstream acceptance.

Image source: ByBit

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