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Topic: 2018-28-09 Philippines Draft Crypto Exchange Rules (Read 157 times)

legendary
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September 28, 2018, 02:50:20 AM
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I really hear a lot of positive news about the Philippines lately and it seems they are really making a tremendous leap to being one crypto hub in Asia together with Japan, South Korea and Singapore. There's even a Blockchain Conference that will be held in Manila next month.

(https://www.blockasia.io/ico-pitch-session-to-set-the-pace-at-blockchain-fair-asia-2018/)

Quote
Blockchain Fair Asia 2018 (PH edition) is planning to hold its inaugural conference on October 11-12, 2018. This premier event will feature global experts from all over Asia.

The event will be held at SMX Convention Center Aura, SM Aura Premier, Taguig City, Metro Manila, Philippines.

Truly amazing that such a small nation is taking steps and wanted to take advantage of crypto/blockchain technology. I wouldn't be surprised that in the next 2-5 years ICO's HQ will be in the Philippines.
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Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/philippines-to-publish-final-ico-regulation-draft-crypto-exchange-rules-within-two-weeks
Date: September 04, 2018

Regulators in the Philippines plan to reveal draft cryptocurrency regulation by the middle of this month, local media outlet The Manila Times reported Monday, September 3.

Citing Ephyro Luis Amatong, chairman of the country’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) speaking to reporters, The Manila Times confirmed cryptocurrency exchanges could soon be considered as traditional “trading platforms.”

“We see the need to regulate them as trading platforms,” Amatong explained.

The news comes following a similar commitment from Filipino lawmakers to formalize the regulatory environment for Initial Coin Offerings (ICO) and their issuers.

As Cointelegraph reported last month, the Philippine SEC had opened its draft rules on the crypto sector to public feedback, the deadline for proposals being August 31. A final version of those rules should appear next week, shortly before the draft exchange proposals, according to The Manila Times.

The Philippine SEC also revealed it had been working in tandem with the central bank, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), in order to establish what Amatong terms “cooperative oversight.”

“We already discussed the matter with the BSP since the BSP is also interested and we are also interested,” he continued, adding:

“The discussion … [involves] joint cooperative oversight over (cryptocurrency exchanges) engaged in trading.”

Such an approach is reminiscent of that taken in Japan, where regulators continue to tighten requirements on exchanges to avoid a repeat of a serious hack in January this year.

The Philippine government had previously created a fintech hub in the Cagayan Economic Zone in April of this year, allowing blockchain and crypto-related firms to operate legally in the zone.
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