Alaska is set to launch monetary regulations for virtual currencies starting 1 January next year, reports revealed this week.
According to the Cooley Law Firm, Alaska will force enterprises using virtual currencies to apply for and obtain money transition licences with the state government.
Alaska, the most northwestern state in the United States, changed money transmission regulations to determine the meaning of a “virtual currency.”
State Crypto Rules
The state’s Division of Banking and Securities (DBS) adopted changes to its local Administrative Code, stating: “[Virtual currencies are a] digital representation of value that is used as a medium of exchange, unit of account, or store of value; and is not money, whether or not denominated in money.”
The code will also require individuals “engaging in money transmission activity involving virtual currency” to submit licencing applications to conduct such transactions.
It also defines “permissible investments” and “monetary value,” but states reward programmes and online gaming virtual coins are not included as virtual currencies.”
Agreements Broken
Previously, crypto-linked platforms have received Limited Licensing Agreement (LLA) from Alaska’s DBS, but digital currencies were not included.
Under the current changes, Cooley Law Firm wrote: “As a result of the explicit inclusion of virtual currency activity as money transmission activity requiring a license, the DBS is phasing out the LLA requirement, and LLAs currently in effect will be voided and removed from the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System record on January 1, 2023. It is not clear if the change to the regulations will require current Alaska licensees that engage in virtual currency activity to take any action.”
Other nations such as Israel, Australia, South Korea, and others may require crypto firms to apply for licences under stricter regulations. The news comes amid the ongoing crisis with FTX, which collapsed into administration on 11 November this year, due to fraud and monetary misappropriation.