The Financial Services and
Markets Authority (FSMA), Belgium’s financial markets watchdog, starting May 17,
2023, will start enforcing a new regulation aimed at monitoring advertisements (ads) targeted at consumers in Belgium. This comes after the regulation was approved
by a Royal Decree on February 8, 2023.
In a webinar held on Wednesday,
the regulation shared some details on the regulation, noting that the new rules relate to adverts
intended to attract crypto investments and released either “as a regular
professional activity or an occasional basis for compensation.”
According to ESMA, while the new
regulation covers virtual assets that function as a means of exchange or
payment such as Bitcoin or Ether, assets with only a utility function or serve
as securities are exempted.
The regulatory agency said it
created the regulation because cryptocurrencies are “a particularly risky investment
asset” popular among Belgians who are mostly younger
investors. The regulator added that last
year’s crypto winter and FTX bankruptcy “have hardly undermined faith in
virtual currencies.”
According to the details shared in a presentation at the webinar, FMSA must be notified 10 days
before a crypto ad that is to be published by a trading platform or an influencer is run
on various media channels such as social media, billboards and websites.
The watchdog noted that it requires
such messages to be clearly labelled as advertisements and carry important
warnings such as on the volatile nature of digital assets, the lack of bank
guarantee for them and legal mechanism to prevent market manipulation or insider
dealing.
As part of the regulatory process, FSMA will also require crypto advertisers to keep for at least a year their ad
materials, agreements and the list of platforms where they were disseminated.
FSMA on Crypto
FSMA’s new regulation on digital
asset advertisement in the regulator’s latest effort to supervise the emerging crypto
industry. As early as 2020, FMSA called for government regulation of cryptocurrencies, noting that the size of the
digital asset market called for attention.
In April 2022, the regulator
began to require all crypto firms operating in the country to register to continue their activities. Months later, the markets supervisor also started consulting on how to classify digital assets.
FlowNow rebrands; Deribit’s zero-fee crypto trading; read today’s new nuggets.
The Financial Services and
Markets Authority (FSMA), Belgium’s financial markets watchdog, starting May 17,
2023, will start enforcing a new regulation aimed at monitoring advertisements (ads) targeted at consumers in Belgium. This comes after the regulation was approved
by a Royal Decree on February 8, 2023.
In a webinar held on Wednesday,
the regulation shared some details on the regulation, noting that the new rules relate to adverts
intended to attract crypto investments and released either “as a regular
professional activity or an occasional basis for compensation.”
According to ESMA, while the new
regulation covers virtual assets that function as a means of exchange or
payment such as Bitcoin or Ether, assets with only a utility function or serve
as securities are exempted.
The regulatory agency said it
created the regulation because cryptocurrencies are “a particularly risky investment
asset” popular among Belgians who are mostly younger
investors. The regulator added that last
year’s crypto winter and FTX bankruptcy “have hardly undermined faith in
virtual currencies.”
According to the details shared in a presentation at the webinar, FMSA must be notified 10 days
before a crypto ad that is to be published by a trading platform or an influencer is run
on various media channels such as social media, billboards and websites.
The watchdog noted that it requires
such messages to be clearly labelled as advertisements and carry important
warnings such as on the volatile nature of digital assets, the lack of bank
guarantee for them and legal mechanism to prevent market manipulation or insider
dealing.
As part of the regulatory process, FSMA will also require crypto advertisers to keep for at least a year their ad
materials, agreements and the list of platforms where they were disseminated.
FSMA on Crypto
FSMA’s new regulation on digital
asset advertisement in the regulator’s latest effort to supervise the emerging crypto
industry. As early as 2020, FMSA called for government regulation of cryptocurrencies, noting that the size of the
digital asset market called for attention.
In April 2022, the regulator
began to require all crypto firms operating in the country to register to continue their activities. Months later, the markets supervisor also started consulting on how to classify digital assets.
FlowNow rebrands; Deribit’s zero-fee crypto trading; read today’s new nuggets.