Virtual asset service providers will be covered by terror financing and anti-money laundering rules as of June 2023.
Hong Kong is to subject crypto providers to the same anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing laws that it does traditional finance firms.
The territory’s Legislative Council voted to add virtual asset service providers (VASPs) to the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter Terrorist Financing Ordinance as of June 1, 2023, according to a Dec. 5 amendment to the law.
The fallout from the collapse of FTX, which was once based in Hong Kong, before departing for Bahamas in September last year, casts doubt over what crypto-friendly ambitions Hong Kong may now have. Prior to the exchange’s failure early November, the territory showed signs of relaxing its tough regulations and becoming a more crypto-friendly environment. The Financial Services and Treasury Bureau said at end-October that it was open to allowing retail customers to trade crypto or approving a virtual assets exchange-traded fund (ETF).
Last month, however, Julia Leung, the deputy CEO of the Securities and Futures Commission, called for tough rules to be implemented on crypto firms, saying that recent events had highlighted the volatility of the industry and the threats posed by its links with traditional financial services.