Indian Crypto Exchanges Seek Clarity on Legal Status and Taxability from the Reserve Bank of India

Crypto exchanges in India are still seeking regulatory clarity and tax status from the Reserve Bank of India following a Supreme Court ruling in favor of the crypto industry earlier this year. India’s Supreme Court reversed the ban placed by the central bank on financial institutions offering crypto-related banking services. It is two months after lifting the ban, crypto exchanges and firms are now seeking clarification regarding the nature of their operations.

The call for clarity

Several crypto exchanges in India today have written to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to seek clarification regarding their status as banks continue denying banking services to them because of a lack of clarity from the regulator. They have sent a collective letter to the central bank on the absence of proper tax regulation. They argue that the lack of clarity on taxation has allowed banks to keep denying services to exchanges conducting crypto-related businesses. Furthermore, the crypto exchanges want clarification concerning whether they are being classified as services, goods, currency, or commodities as this is set to impact the way they get taxed under GST (Goods and Services Tax) framework. According to these crypto exchanges, it is significant to know their taxation requirements to understand if they would be categorized under India’s Goods and Services Tax.

In March this year, the Supreme Court overturned the ban on cryptocurrency usage; thus, opening the door for the crypto industry in the country. However, crypto companies are now seeking clarity on their legal status and taxability from the central bank, which has been procrastinating and burying its head in the sand ever since it lost the court battle.

According to Praveenkumar Vijayakumar, the CEO, and chairman of crypto exchange Belfrics Global: “If the digital assets are not exempted from GST, the digital currency exchanges in India are going to have a standoff with the tax authority. In the wake of the recent Supreme Court ruling, we have also approached the RBI for clarity on this, as if we pay GST on the whole transaction, then most platforms would not be able to survive.”

In the past, the Indirect Tax Department had launched investigations into exchanges operating crypto businesses in the country to determine the GST rate, which could be levied on them.

Crypto exchanges have opposed the central bank’s decision prohibiting local banks from offering banking services to these firms.

Sidharth Sogani, the CEO of security research company Credbaco Global said that the central bank should give a directive for local banks to resume banking relationships with cryptocurrency exchanges. He stated since the Supreme Court reversed the central bank’s ban, the central bank must remind domestic banks to resume business with crypto-based companies. 

How the new crypto law in India could play out

Despite overturning the ban and the matter considered closed, the legal status of cryptocurrencies in the country still remains far from settled.  India is a good example of countries across the globe, which are struggling to develop proper guidelines for crypto assets. National leaders are getting it increasingly difficult to ignore cryptocurrency adoption and now come into a realization that if they remain silent, then courts will step in. Efforts to ban cryptocurrencies in the country is next to possible. Regulatory authorities will have no choice but to accept the crypto legitimacy as an asset class.

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India's Largest Crypto Exchange CoinDCX Raises $2.5 Million in New Growth Capital to Increase User Base

CoinDCX, India’s largest crypto exchange, has announced that it has raised $2.5 million from investors like Polychain Capital and Coinbase Ventures. Polychain Capital led the funding round with support from Coinbase Ventures, the investment arm of the US cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase. 

CoinDCX had raised a $3 million Series A round earlier in March, which was also led by Polychain Capital and included HDT Group (operator of BitMEX) and Bain Capital Ventures.

The company’s other main investor, Coinbase Ventures, has also made investments in other crypto businesses like BlockFi, Messari, Compound, Securitize, and Etherscan.

Thriving through tough times

There is a good reason why India has not been having lots of firms around cryptocurrencies or their trading. The key reason is that the Reserve Bank of India (country’s banking regulator) issued a ban on crypto industry in 2018. The ban shut down doors to new crypto companies while almost crippling whatever cryptocurrency firms existed during that time.

In March 2020, India’s Supreme Court made a landmark ruling that overturned the ban issued by the Central Bank. Ever since, things have changed and the more resilient cryptocurrency firms, which survived the ban, are now flourishing. That explains why CoinDCX, the largest crypto exchange in the country, is doing very well because of its resilience. Recently, the Mumbai based startup has secured a capital funding of $2.5 million from Polychain Capital and Coinbase ventures.

CoinDCX stated that it will use the fresh round of funds to handle the growth spurt, which has been initiated by the Central Bank’s recent announcement. The crypto exchange intends to drive cryptocurrency adoption in India by supporting its plans of increasing cryptocurrency traders and investors in India to 50 million. The company plans to divert these funds to assist in achieving that goal. Moreover, the firm seeks to develop a secure and user-focused exchange to support the rising demand for cryptocurrency in the country.

But that is not the only focus of the company. While India’s market is certainly growing, the majority of the population does not understand the concept of cryptocurrency. Based on the number alone, the country has lots of potentials when it comes to the cryptocurrency market. But there is a great need for blockchain and crypto education. CoinDCX aims to address this gap by launching a $1.3 million initiative for educational campaigns, consumer campaigns, community engagements, and meetup events. As part of the initiative, the company intends to create an online academy, which is a cryptocurrency and blockchain learning program aimed toward first-time cryptocurrency traders.

Following the Reserve Bank of India lifting banking ban on the crypto industry, CoinDCX stated that its sign-ups had risen by 10 times in one week. The crypto exchange said that its trading volumes had increased by 47% and it saw a 150% growth in daily active users in March.

The fresh round of funding comes a time when cryptocurrency trade in India is experiencing new highs despite the global economic crisis caused by the coronavirus outbreak. Crypto investments such as Bitcoin have been seeing growth ahead of traditional assets like gold and equity globally. Bitcoin also has been receiving positive endorsements from mainstream investors, including the US billionaire hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones who revealed that 1-2% of his assets are held in Bitcoin.  

India’s supreme court turned the tables on crypto ban in landmark ruling

In April 2018, India’s Central Bank instructed all banks under the banking regulator not to deal with digital currencies or provide services to organizations and individuals dealing with cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. The move that the regulator took was directed at a consistent effort to oppose payment systems, which undermine the integrity of the banking system. The directive caused lots of firms to either close down their businesses or shift their operations outside the country.

But when the Supreme Court overturned such a directive in February, crypto firms rejoiced and since then the market has been flourishing. Recently the Reserve Bank of India has also confirmed that there is no banking ban on the cryptocurrency industry. The Central Bank responded to a Right to Information (RIT) inquiry that asked whether the regulator has banned banks from providing bank accounts for crypto traders. The regulator confirmed that there is no such prohibition. With the environment ripe of crypto firms to nurture, lots of more investments, like the one recently funded to CoinDCX, are expected to increase.

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India’s Government Plans to Bring Back Law to Ban Cryptocurrencies

India’s government plans to bring back the law that would ban cryptocurrencies in the country. A report revealed that the Finance Ministry is now inviting other ministries to have a discussion of its earlier draft on the crypto ban introduced a year ago. 

A senior government official stated, “A note has been moved (by the finance ministry) for inter-ministerial consultations. After the consultations, the draft should be sent to the parliament for final review.”

Final judgment may call for better regulation, not ban  

The government is considering a legal framework as more effective than a circular from India’s Central Bank in this regard. The April 2018 circular from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) prevented local banks from providing banking services to individuals and companies dealing with cryptocurrencies.

After consultations, the draft would be sent to the cabinet and then to parliament. If the draft is similar to the earlier proposal, then the bill would be a massive blow to the crypto community in the country.

Earlier in 2019 July, a high-level panel from the government prepared a draft that proposed a complete ban on the use of cryptocurrency in India. The draft had proposed imprisonment of up to 10 years and a fine of up to $3.29 million for anyone dealing with cryptocurrencies.

In March 2020, the Supreme Court of India overturned the banking ban on cryptocurrencies imposed by the Central Bank as unconstitutional and allowed all banks in the country to provide banking services to crypto firms.  

As experts previously warned, the country’s fight for cryptocurrency was not over with the Supreme Court’s overturning the 2018 banking ban.  The process of a possible ban on cryptocurrency is still allegedly ongoing as the industry players are now being called to engage in a constructive discussion.

How the new crypto law in India could play out

The legal status of cryptocurrencies in India still remains far from settled. The country is a good example of nations across the world, which are struggling to create proper guidelines for cryptocurrencies.  India’s prime minister and other national leaders are getting it difficult to ignore crypto adoption.

Now they have come to realize that if they ban crypto assets, then courts would step in and overturn the ban. Efforts to impose a ban on cryptocurrencies in India is next to impossible. Regulatory authorities have no choice, but to accept the legitimacy of cryptocurrency as an asset class.

India’s Finance Minister Says Crypto Ban May not Happen and Government May Experiment with New Technologies

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India’s finance minister, Nirmala Sitharaman, has hinted that the government may not go for a blanket ban on cryptocurrency in the country.

The finance minister has said that the government is open to experimentation with new technologies and is not closing its minds for them. Sitharaman added that the government is engaging discussions with the Reserve Bank of India and would take a very calibrated approach on the matter.

According to the finance minister, the call on cryptocurrencies would be taken after deliberations with cabinet members and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) are over. She revealed that the RBI is engaging in lots of discussions and negotiations regarding cryptocurrencies and would take a call on how unofficial cryptocurrency would be handled and regulated.   

In an interview with CNBC-TV18 on March 6, Sitharaman said: “We want to make sure there is a window available for all kinds of experiments which will have to take place in the crypto world. It is not as if we are going to look inwards and say we are not going to have any of this. There will be a very calibrated position.”

The finance minister said that the government is not averse to new technology, and therefore the government’s position on crypto assets will be a “calibrated one.” She said that since the globe moves fast with technology, India’s government cannot look the other way. She further mentioned that in the fintech space, India is leading the way and several nations are looking to emulate India’s fintech-based developments.

India’s cryptocurrency stakeholders, who have been lobbying in support of positive regulation for the industry against an outright ban, have welcomed the recent statement from Sitharaman.

Plans to Issue National Cryptocurrency

The finance minister’s remarks on cryptocurrencies shed new light regarding the government’s plan on such digital assets. In late January, the government revealed plans to bring a new bill (The Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021) in the country’s lower house to ban private cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and instead create a framework for the introduction of an official digital currency to be issued by the country’s Central bank.

In 2018, RBI banned all cryptocurrencies, a move aimed to protect the country’s financial system. But in 2019, India’s Supreme Court asked the government to come up with crypto policies. In 2020, the Supreme Court overturned the RBI’s ban and this was a big win for local crypto users and the victory enabled a dramatic increase in crypto trading volumes in the country.

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