Dubai’s VARA to see several hundred VASPs enter licensing regime as Hong Kong ups its crypto stance
In a recent Forbes
piece,
it was noted that the virtual asset regulatory authority in Dubai expects to
see several hundred virtual assets exchanges and service providers enter its licensing
regime. This comes as CEOs of major crypto exchanges laud both UAE and Hong
Kong as crypto hubs.
As per Henson
Orser CEO of VARA, speaking to Forbes, “VARA makes Dubai one of a handful of
global jurisdictions implementing a mature framework for crypto and virtual
assets. The VARA framework expects to see several hundred virtual asset
exchanges and service providers in Dubai start to come into its licensing
regime in 2023.”
At the same time
Hong Kong is also competing to get a piece of the crypto and digital asset
market with the launch of new crypto licensing regime. In addition Hong Kong’s
banking regulator is pressuring financial institutions including HSBC and
Standard Chartered to take on crypto exchanges as clients.
In parallel the
Central Bank of UAE came
out with its new guidance on anti-money laundering and combatting the
financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) for Licensed Financial Institutions (LFIs),
banks, finance companies, exchange houses, payment service providers, towards
virtual assets and Virtual asset service providers. While VARA came
out with its virtual asset rulebook for, the virtual assets transfer, and settlement service.
Both countries
are showing digital asset entities that they are serious for business. In a
Yahoo article,
Ben Caselin, CEO of Maskex states Dubai and Hong Kong are establishing themselves
as crypto hubs by recognizing the potential for virtual assets and blockchain
technology.
He explains, “Much
of the discussion has focused on whether Dubai, Hong Kong or indeed some other
jurisdiction will come out on top. However, the debate is much more nuanced
than that. The emergence of Dubai and Hong Kong as crypto centers is really a
testament to the power of healthy competition in spurring innovation in the
Web3 space.”
He believes that
as the U.S. grapples with crypto regulation, there is a real opportunity for
other countries to assert themselves on the more level playing field provided
by a digital-first global economy. With favorable yet robust regulatory
environments, both Dubai and Hong Kong are well-positioned to lead the way.
Despite being on
similar paths, Dubai and Hong Kong have different motivations for their push into
crypto and the Web3 space. To him Hong Kong wants to reinvigorate the greater
Chinese economy, while Dubai seeks to shift its dependence on oil.
Yet he contends
that both have recognized the scale of opportunity and understand that by pooling
resources they could be at the forefront of a new wave of digital innovation
leading advancements in the scalability, privacy and interoperability of
blockchains, therefore benefiting the entire crypto ecosystem.
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