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ESMA Warns of Risks of Volatile Crypto Exposure

Daniela Kirova
Daniela Kirova
Daniela Kirova
Author:
Daniela Kirova
Writer
Daniela is a writer at Bankless Times, covering the latest news on the cryptocurrency market and blockchain industry. She has over 15 years of experience as a writer, having ghostwritten for several online publications in the financial sector.
January 31st, 2023
  • Only 90 European investment funds have direct crypto exposure
  • Consumer exposure can soar in a very brief period of time

Investors’ growing adoption of crypto means future crashes of the digital assets could affect traditional financial markets, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) warned in a paper published today, pointing out the growing risk of operational failure and consumer rip-offs, CoinDesk reported.

The paper presents an analysis of how agency officials see crypto market risk as they prepare for their new responsibilities under the upcoming framework EU Regulation on Crypto Asset Markets.

Direct crypto exposure is still limited

The paper cites the results of a regulatory survey in April, which show only 90 European investment funds had direct crypto exposure. Around two dozen more had indirect exposure via derivatives. To compare, the EU has 60,000 funds in total.

The ESMA wrote in the document:

Rapid change is possible

According to officials, this situation could change in the blink of an eye. They gave carmaker Tesla as an example. The company announced it would accept payments for its products in bitcoin last year, then changed its mind, but both decisions had a profound impact on bitcoin’s price.

Officials state the connection between crypto and traditional financial markets would become stronger if a major tech firm introduced crypto-based peer-to-peer payments or a leading retailer started to accept crypto as payment. In this scenario, consumer exposure could soar in a very brief period of time.

The risk of history repeating itself

ESMA officials are concerned about history repeating itself. More specifically, risks like mis-selling and price manipulation occur in conventional financial markets. For example, exchanges like Bybit and Huobi let users make bets with as much as 100x leverage.

New and unique threats

The study also looked at previously nonexistent threats like large pseudonymous orders skewing prices, manipulation of consensus mechanisms, network congestion, and others unique to crypto.

Under the EU Regulation on Crypto Asset Markets, which is expected to take effect in 2024, ESMA will have new privileges and powers to introduce additional regulations on crypto assets, considered similar to conventional assets.

The authority will also be able to guide the content of new assets’ white papers and monitor major service providers, who have 15 million or more customers.

Contributors

Daniela Kirova
Writer
Daniela is a writer at Bankless Times, covering the latest news on the cryptocurrency market and blockchain industry. She has over 15 years of experience as a writer, having ghostwritten for several online publications in the financial sector.