In an attempt to regulate the upcoming digital currency, the Libra Association is planning to receive a payment system license from the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA), Reuters reported on Wednesday.
The prospect of the company to gain the license from the Swiss financial market regulator was revealed by the association of Facebook and its 27 partners in an official statement.
“Switzerland offers a pathway for responsible financial services innovation harmonized with global financial norms and strong oversight,” the Libra Association stated.
The body behind Libra has already initiated talks with the Swiss financial watchdog and is looking into ways to receive the payment system license.
“We are engaging in constructive dialogue with FINMA and are encouraged to see a feasible pathway for an open-source blockchain network to become a regulated, low-friction, high-security payment system,” it added.
Facing resistance from global regulators
Though Swiss regulators are lenient towards Facebook’s ambition to bring Libra, other regulators and lawmakers from major countries are in the payments industry.
In two separate hearings in front of US lawmakers in July, David Marcus, head of Facebook’s Libra, failed to clarify many crucial design-related questions about the proposed digital currency.
A US treasury official recently said that Libra must company with highest regulatory standards to prevent any possibility of money laundering and terror financing.
Responding to the concerns of a US senator, Facebook recently revealed that it is planning to tie its cryptocurrency including US dollars, euro, yen, British pound, and Singapore dollar. However, it clarified that Libra Association, not Facebook, will be in the liberty to decide the operational criteria of Libra.
On a side note, FINMA last month to two crypto companies – SEBA Crypto AG and Sygnum AG – operating in the country, making them the first such companies to gain the license.
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