Britain will focus crypto rules on stablecoins, minister says – Reuters

Britain will focus crypto rules on stablecoins, minister says – Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain will focus first on regulating stablecoins rather than the broader cryptocurrency market, its financial services minister said on Tuesday, citing the threat to competition should any major private effort dominate the emerging field.Facebook Inc's move in 2019 to introduce its own stablecoin Diem, then known as Libra, raised concerns among governments and central banks that a major payments competitor could emerge overnight.“We need to manage risks to competition,” John Glen told a City & Financial conference.“There is the potential for some firms to swiftly achieve dominance and crowd out other players, due to their ability to scale and plug into existing online services,” Glen said.“We believe the case for intervention in the wider cryptocurrency markets is less immediately pressing.”Stablecoins such as the planned Diem, which is now run by an association that includes Facebook and currently seeking approval in Switzerland, are designed to avoid the volatility typical of cryptocurrencies like bitcoin.Stablecoins have become the largest component of cryptocurrencies by trading volume, Glen said. While no globally systemic player has yet emerged, he added, this could change rapidly.The largest stablecoin by market capitalisation, Tether, is a fraction of the size of bitcoin and little used for commerce.