Digital currency firms are still struggling to meet state licensing requirements and secure banking relationships, industry analysts told ACAMS moneylaundering.com.
A New York regulator's plan to hold senior bankers legally responsible for compliance failures conflicts with federal rules and threatens to exacerbate an industry trend to shed risk-fraught accounts wholesale, lobbying groups said.
U.S. state regulators should require virtual currency firms currently subject to federal anti-money laundering rules to verify the identities of users of their services who do not hold accounts, a regulatory organization said Tuesday.
New York gave a Bitcoin company the green light to operate under state regulations Thursday, in what may be the first in a series of charters intended to mitigate concerns about virtual currencies.
For all of the rhetoric to the contrary, virtual currencies may turn out to be a tempest in a teapot, at least for money laundering investigators, according to Jeffrey Robinson, author of "Bitcon: The Naked Truth About Bitcoin."
New York's financial regulator could soon hone expected rules on the use of virtual currencies after industry representatives complained to the agency that parts of its initial plan were vague.
Love or hate New Yorks plans to shield Bitcoin and its competitors from financial crooks, one thing is certain: the proposal is only the first of dozens that will shape the industry.
With New York rules for digital currency exchanges in the works, other states are stepping up to draft rules of their own, speakers at a Manhattan Bitcoin conference said Monday.
U.S. officials have sent formal warning letters to a number of virtual currency firms it suspects have failed to register as money services businesses, the head of the nation's financial intelligence unit said Tuesday.
The regulatory concerns of Bitcoin and other digital currency platforms may extend beyond the anti-money laundering requirements outlined by the U.S. Treasury Department earlier this year, lawmakers and congressional witnesses said Tuesday.
Lawmakers are asking the IRS to quickly finalize guidance on potential tax liabilities of digital money, including the crypto-currency platform Bitcoin.