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US Treasury Secretary Mnuchin Says G7 in Agreement on Libra, Cryptocurrencies

“There was a clear agreement ... that Libra, in particular, raises some very significant concerns, and cryptocurrencies more broadly," said Mnuchin.

Updated Dec 11, 2022, 1:51 p.m. Published Jul 19, 2019, 10:00 a.m.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said his executive agency was in line with other financial ministries of the Group of Seven (G7) regarding Facebook’s leap into cryptocurrencies.

“There was a clear agreement from all G7 finance ministers and central bank governors that Libra, in particular, raises some very significant concerns, and cryptocurrencies more broadly,” Mnuchin said on CNBC’s Squawk Box. “Before any of us let these go through, we’re going to make sure those concerns are satisfied."

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For his part, the secretary would “very, very strong[ly]” impress upon the crypto industry the same regulations "physical money service providers” abide by. He cited specifically the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA), to that end.

“At the treasury we’ve been doing work on this for over the last year,” he said. "We put together a working group."

While Mnuchin “wants to be careful that anyone that is using bitcoin … is using it for proper purposes and not illicit purposes,” he also said distributed ledger technology has “clear uses.”

“On this front, first of all, let me be clear, we very much support financial innovation and anything that lowers payment processing costs, especially cross-border.”

The issue for Mnuchin, he said, is the opportunity for cryptocurrencies to be used for money laundering and terrorist financing.

“We’re going to make sure bitcoin doesn't become the equivalent to Swiss numbered bank accounts,” Mnuchin said.

Steven Mnuchinhttps://www.shutterstock.com/image-photo/berlin-germany-20170316-finance-minister-steven-750217510?src=NQDMxbO5nowK9JdATdtVrw-1-1 image via Shutterstock

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  • Bitcoin's long-term rally is "broken" and will remain so until the price climbs above $85,000, said Jean-David Péquignot, chief commercial officer of derivatives exchange Deribit.
  • Péquignot said that if bitcoin closes below the key $60,000 support level, the next likely target is its 200-week simple moving average near $58,000.
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