Agentforce, the GenAI Agent by Salesforce
Back in November 2018, the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) announced a conceptual framework for the potential regulation of virtual asset trading platforms and would consider to grant licenses to platform operators[1].
Having examined in depth the technical, operational and other aspects of virtual asset trading, it was concluded that some types of centralized platforms trading tokens should be regulated[2].
[1] SFC 1 Nov 2018 News and annoncements : Statement on regulatory framework for virtual asset portfolios managers, fund distributors and trading platform operators
[2] SFC 6 Nov 2019 Position paper : Regulation of virtual asset trading platforms
With the rise of traditional financial institutions and service providers entering the virtual asset trading playing field, the virtual asset ecosystem has steadily grown, becoming more sophisticated in providing services comparable to traditional mainstream finance. However, the trading of virtual assets also brought on inherent risks which pose significant investor protection concerns. As stated by the SFC, these risks include money laundering, terrorist financing and fraud, as well as volatility, liquidity concerns and market manipulation and abuse.
In recent years, international standard setting bodies have closely monitored the risks associated with virtual assets and considered how to tackle them. In response to the heightened risks associated with virtual assets, the SFC published a circular outlining a conceptual framework regarding the potential regulation of virtual asset trading platforms in November 2018.
After having examined different aspects of virtual asset trading, the SFC published a position paper that concludes a set of regulatory standards to pave the way for the issuance of operating licenses to virtual asset trading based in Hong Kong. An opt-in licensing mechanism provides platform operators with the option of attaining a regulated status. If a platform operator chooses to be regulated and apply for a virtual asset trading platform license, a licensed platform operator must comply with all licensing conditions imposed on it. If the platform operator decides to opt-out for license application, it has to ensure that the virtual assets traded on its platform are not “securities” or “futures contracts” under the Securities and Futures Ordinance (SFO). Such distinction also allows investors to identify those platforms that are regulated, providing comfort that investor protection measures associated with licensed operators are in place.
Platform operator that chooses to obtain the virtual asset trading platform license could also be more competitive as a SFC license can act as an indicator to the market and investors that the licensed operator is willing to adhere to a high level of standards and practices.
Under the SFC regulatory framework, a platform should have the following features before applying for a license :
The SFC will not accept licensing applications from operators that only provide a direct peer-to-peer marketplace for transactions by investors who typically retain control over their own assets (be they fiat currencies or virtual assets) or operators that trade virtual assets for clients, including order routing, but do not provide ATS themselves.
If the SFC decides to grant a licence to a qualified platform operator, it will impose licensing conditions to address the specific risks associated with its operations. The following are the licensing conditions set out by SFC for licensed platform operation[3] :
* The first report must be provided to the SFC within 18 months of the date of approval of the licence
* Subsequent reports should be submitted to the SFC within four months after the end of each financial year and additionally upon the SFC’s request
[3] SFC 6 Nov 2019 Position paper : Regulation of virtual asset trading platforms
1) Safe custody of assets
Trust structure
Client assets must be held on trust for clients through a wholly-owned subsidiary of the platform operator which is incorporated in Hong Kong. It should also hold a “trust or company service provider licence” under the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorist Financing Ordinance
Hot and cold wallets
Platform operator should ensure that it (or the Associated Entity) stores 98% of client virtual assets in cold wallets (i.e., where private keys are kept offline) and limits its holdings of client virtual assets in hot wallets to less than 2% (i.e., where the private keys to virtual assets are connected to the internet and more susceptible to hackers, possible regulation, and other technical vulnerabilities)
Insurance
Platform operator should ensure that insurance policies are in place to fully cover the risk associated with the virtual assets held in the hot wallets and a substantial coverage (e.g., 95%) of the virtual assets in the cold wallets
Private key management
The usage of private keys to digitally sign transactions should be encouraged, with internal controls and governance procedures in place for private key management
2) Know-your-client (KYC)
3) Anti-money laundering and counter-financing of terrorism (AML/CFT)
4) Prevention of market manipulative and abusive activities
5) Accounting and auditing
6) Risk management
7) Conflicts of interest
8) Virtual assets for trading
Platform operator should set up a function responsible for establishing, implementing and enforcing the following features:
A platform operator should perform all reasonable due diligence on all virtual assets before including them on its platform for trading, and ensure that they continue to satisfy all application criteria i.e.:
There are 3 key steps to address your licensing in Hong Kong:
1) Assess current business state and prepare documentations for submission
Tangible outputs:
Business plan, Application documentation, policy and process design, licensing advisory, project management
2) Produce independent assessment reports on internal policy and process controls
Tangible outputs:
Independent assessment reports, gap analysis and recommendation
3) Support to select appropriate responsible candidates and adhere to relevant financial resource rules
4) Drive implementation of policy, process and system
Tangible outputs:
TOM design, operation process, stakeholder’s mobilisation, implementation roadmap, training programme, project tracking and reporting, post implementation reviews, internal audit report
Helina Lo
Head of Risk & Regulatory
+ 852 5664 1057
helina.lo@sia-partners.com
Brian Lin
Manager, Risk & Regulatory
+ 852 9706 0207
brian.lin@sia-partners.com
Rick Mak
Manager, Digital Payment
+ 852 5664 1054
rick.mak@sia-partners.com