The EU Fifth Anti-Money Laundering Directive came into force yesterday, July 9, Cointelegraph auf Deutsch reports[1] July 10. Measures within the directive will set a new legal framework for European financial watchdogs to regulate digital currencies in order to protect against money laundering and terrorist financing.
As the EU Commission wrote in an accompanying press release[2], the new rules[3] enact stricter transparency requirements directed at the use of “anonymous payments through prepaid cards” and “virtual currency exchange platforms” for the purposes of money laundering or terrorist financing. The EU Commission writes:
“The 5th Anti-Money laundering directive also increases the cooperation and exchange of information between anti-money laundering[4] (AML) and prudential supervisors, including with the European Central Bank”.
The Commission writes that in order to assure proper protections against the possible illicit use of digital currencies[5], the proper authorities should be able to observe how they are used:
“For the purposes of anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT), competent authorities should be able, through obliged entities, to monitor the use of virtual currencies”.
In order for regulators to effectively monitor virtual currencies, the Commission states that regulators should be able to associate currency addresses with owners, and should form a mechanism for self-reporting:
“To combat the risks related to the anonymity, national Financial Intelligence Units (FIUs) should be able to obtain information allowing them to associate virtual currency addresses to the identity of the owner of virtual currency. In addition, the possibility to allow users to self-declare to designated authorities on a voluntary basis should be further assessed”.