Share this article

New York Governor Proposes Giving Financial Watchdog More Teeth

Andrew Cuomo wants to give the Department of Financial Services more powers in regulating certain licensed entities, including crypto startups.

Updated Sep 13, 2021, 12:07 p.m. Published Jan 9, 2020, 9:00 a.m.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York
Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo wants to give the Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) more powers in regulating certain licensed entities, including cryptocurrency startups.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Başka bir hikayeyi kaçırmayın.Bugün State of Crypto Bültenine abone olun. Tüm bültenleri gör

Cuomo presented his 2020 "State of the State" report on Wednesday, a 321-page list of proposals including a new look at exemptions that currently exist for certain consumer financial products and services.

While NYDFS, the creator of the notoriously hard to acquire "BitLicense," can already bring enforcement actions against unlicensed entities, some companies can claim they are not subject to the regulator because they do not directly sell their products to consumers.

Further, insurance and banking laws grant NYDFS the authority to collect costs for assessments but companies operating under the Financial Services Law are not explicitly required to pay up.

"Entities licensed under the FSL (e.g. virtual currency entities) are not required to pay such assessments, despite being subject to similar examination and oversight requirements," the document reads.

Cuomo wants to amend the law to close these loopholes, according to the report.

NYDFS has regulated cryptocurrency startups under its virtual currency license since mid-2014. Superintendent Linda Lacewell announced in October the agency was reviewing the regime, citing the crypto industry's evolution since the BitLicense was proposed.

Changes to be considered include a modification to the approval process for listing cryptocurrencies and a model framework for coin listings that exchanges can use. NYDFS is accepting public comment through Jan. 27.

Lebih untuk Anda

U.S. DOJ hits Paxful for $4 million in case tied to illegal sex work, money laundering

The U.S. Department of Justice grabbed another of the men it alleges moved billions in criminal money at BTC-e.  (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)

The crypto platform's penalty was sharply reduced due to its ability to pay, according to U.S. authorities.

Yang perlu diketahui:

  • The U.S. Department of Justice won a $4 million penalty from former crypto platform Paxful in a sentence tied to the dodging of money-laundering laws.
  • The amount was reduced from an original amount of $112 million by prosecutors after determining the business couldn't pay that much, the DOJ said.