Risk Managers Getting Coffee: Episode 1

Season 1, Episode 1: Alexander Larsen meets with Gregory Irgin in the UAE to share experiences and insights

In this series of Risk Managers Getting Coffee, we’ll be meeting with seven Risk Managers to gain insight into their risk experiences, areas of expertise and to learn more about risk management in the country they work in.

In this first episode, Alexander Larsen met Gregory Irgin in the UAE. Gregory influences and drives integrated risk management – enterprise risk management, insurance, resilience (business continuity management and crisis security management) – resulting in shareholder protection and return on investment. He has worked across the Middle East and Africa and has exciting stories to share around geopolitical risks.

Introduction: Gregory is Head of Group ERM and Insurance within the aluminium and smelting sector in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, producing and selling aluminium in its 100% form. His customers are all over the world including big companies such as BMW. A mine coming online in Guinea and sales offices are based in America, Europe and China.

Episodes will be released every few weeks here on the Risk Guide website and via our LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/risk-guide) and YouTube pages (https://www.youtube.com/c/riskguide).

Episode 1 Overview:

2:36 How did you get into Risk? Gregory originally trained as a lawyer in England, worked in New York until 9/11. Following this he worked in the UK in insurance construction claims and contracts. He has always been an advocate of ethical leadership. Worked all over the world in places such as Jordan, Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan. He discusses headlines v reality, understanding whats really going on in the country and once you know there’s no going back.

3:47 Geopolitics: Africa & Latin America: Working in London, Gregory was travelling to Africa and Latin America. Previously had a trip to Guinea to meet a Government representative and while boarding the plane, received a call saying the person he was due to meet had just been shot. Looking at it now, the stability in Guinea has changed a lot over 10 years.

4:38 People Risk: Nationalisation & Recruitment: Alexander and Gregory discuss bringing on board nationals to be involved and trained early in a project. They want to feel valued, rather than just expats on site. Bringing nationals in early so they are mentored and embedded within the team before expats leave. There will be an issue with Brexit as skilled workers may be leaving.

6:28 What makes a good risk manager, soft skill set vs quantitative and technical knowledge. Gregory is pro soft skills and breadth in risk management. It is essential to step back and review the situation, communication is key. A Risk Manager can draw on technical experts in any industry and don’t need to be quant heavy. They need to analyse information and interpret this to the top level management. Ultimately need a balance around the table to extract the right information from the right people and experts in the company.

9:03 People Bias- How do we engage people? The fundamentals to any organisation are the people. There is a duty of care to lead with ethics, manage people well and drive behaviour. However how can we do that? Each department has own agenda, KPIs arise as tick-boxes and everyone should all be working towards same goals. Alexander had previously worked with a national park senior management team in the UK. Some directors hadn’t ever seen company objectives and some didn’t agree with them. The CEO had just put them together and assumed they would be backed by the rest of the board. How can the whole organisation work together if the CEO and board management aren’t even aligned?

We hope you find this interview useful and informative!

Risk Managers Getting Coffee

Meeting and Sharing experiences (and coffee) with Risk Managers across the world, with Alexander Larsen.

We are proud to announce the first season of “Risk Managers Getting Coffee”. In Season 1 of Risk Managers Getting Coffee, we’ll be meeting with seven Risk Managers to gain insight into their risk experiences, areas of expertise and to learn more about risk management in the country they work in.

At a time where risk and resilience has never been more important, Our guests share risk management expertise, opinions and thoughts on the future.

Trailer- Risk Managers Getting Coffee

Episodes will be released every few weeks here on the Risk Guide website and via our LinkedIn and YouTube pages.

Season 1 Participants:

Gregory Irgin – UAE – Gregory influences and drives integrated risk management – enterprise risk management, insurance, resilience (business continuity management and crisis security management) – resulting in shareholder protection and return on investment. He has worked across the Middle East and Africa and has exciting stories to share around geopolitical risks.

Episode released on 23-Mar-21, found here https://riskguide.wordpress.com/2021/03/23/risk-managers-getting-coffee-episode-1/

Dr Maria Papadaki – UAE – Years of experience in Risk Management from both Academia and Industry, with numerous of years in the implementation, development, improvement and management of risk frameworks, tools and techniques. Involved in Blockchain technology and other innovative technologies.

Peter Smith – UAE – Peter has over 13 years of experience leading teams of advisory professionals and implementing innovative initiatives in Project Controls Solutions and Risk Management across sectors including Oil & Gas, Rail, Infrastructure and Construction in countries like the UK, UAE and Iraq

Horst Simon – Namibia – A veteran in banking operations management, mergers, take-overs and implementation projects; who is now at the forefront of the Future of Risk Management with Risk Management Concepts and Risk Culture Building programs that disrupt and transform organisations to build sustainable competitive advantage.

Mykhailo Rushkovskyi – Ukraine – Has Held several high level risk positions in Energy companies across Ukraine and is a strong advocate for improving risk culture and reporting in his companies.

Aarn Wennekers – Qatar – Extensive international experience supporting Board Chairmen and Directors to promote good governance and enhance oversight of the executive management team to ensure the organization achieves its strategic, operational, reporting, and compliance objectives.

Paul Edge – Portugal – Based in Portugal, Paul is a Risk Manager with years of experience working with Quantitative Risk methods and has been involved in the blockchain space for a while. He has also established a cryptocurrency StatiCoin, a stable coin solution for traders looking for safe investment and merchants looking for a non-volatile digital currency.

We are sure you will enjoy these interviews with these excellent risk professionals!

Blockchain & Cryptocurrency – Security, Use Cases and Challenges to implementation

Blockchain technology presents users with enhanced security and efficiency, but it is not without its challenges – including overcoming the ingrained habits of its users

BY ALEXANDER LARSEN AND FAISAL ALNAHDY originally published in Enterprise Risk publication by the Institute of Risk Management (IRM)

 

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The last couple of years has seen a real buzz around a new technology called blockchain, which in essence is just a decentralised public database (the chain) of digital information (the block). Transactions are recorded into this public database through consensus across a network of decentralised computers, which is achieved by a proof-of-work system called mining.

Many organisations are implementing it already including IBM, Google, American Express, Oracle, Facebook, Ford, Amazon and Nestlé. There are also blockchain-specific companies offering blockchain solutions for supply chain, social media and stock control. These companies often use crypto-utility tokens within their ecosystem. There are also blockchain-based coins with no other use than that they seek to behave in a similar way to traditional currency and to potentially replace it. Whether a utility token or currency coin,

both of which fall into the category of cryptocurrency, most are available for purchasing as investment or as a way of speculating on various exchanges globally.

 

Hacking incidents and vulnerabilities

There has already been a number of major and high-profile hacking incidents which has government regulators concerned. When it comes to hacking, it is not so much the cryptocurrencies that are the problem, but rather the exchanges on which they are traded and the digital wallets where many of them are held.

Many exchanges are unregulated or loosely regulated at best. Their governance standards and cybersecurity measures are severely lacking, which is where the problems lie. Some exchanges have been hacked in recent years. Interestingly, hacking risk is also one of the main concerns for the existing banking system, which means fiat and cryptocurrencies have the same security concern. For instance, online banking apps can be exposed to hacking which aims to steal users’ login data and debit or credit card information.

A potential solution to hacking incidents on exchanges is the introduction of decentralised exchanges, essentially a cryptocurrency exchange on the blockchain. This would reduce hacking significantly. Unfortunately, it is not currently practical, due to poor user interfaces, but it could become the standard of the future, especially if regulation supports this innovation.

While it is difficult to govern cryptocurrency itself, and due to the fact that cryptocurrency is apparently unhackable, what policymakers should focus on is the regulation of the services associated with the use of cryptocurrencies. Regulation should focus on stricter business practices within exchanges to avoid fraud and scams, as well as introducing minimum but high standards of cyber risk requirements in order to protect against hacking, phishing and other cyber-related attacks.

Screen Shot 2019-09-25 at 21.06.45Most people involved with the technology agree that blockchain networks are virtually unhackable although some argue that all “software” is vulnerable. The one vulnerability that everyone agrees on is that blockchain technology can be hacked through a mechanism called 51 per cent attacks. This happens when 51 per cent of a network is owned by the same group of people, enabling them to manipulate transactions on what is effectively no longer a decentralised network.

While this is possible on some of the very low market cap coins and tokens, it is highly expensive, and some would suggest impossibly expensive, on larger market cap coins such as Bitcoin. According to the CEO of a new blockchain company in Oman, who we interviewed, aside from a 51 per cent attack, no one can hack a blockchain. The CEO echoes the sentiment that vulnerabilities tend to exist in the applications that use blockchain technology such as exchanges and wallet.

 

Blockchain and financial services

Various studies suggest that implementing blockchain in the banking industry alone could decrease expenses by $20 billion by 2022. In addition, the technology could boost the safety of customers’ data in a business. Many policymakers in the banking and finance sector already believe that blockchain technology could replace the existing SWIFT transfer system in banks.

According to the IT department of Dhofar Bank in Oman who we spoke to, the bank has already implemented the Ripple blockchain. They said it provides a better experience for international money remittances, increased security against cyberattacks, an improved speed of transfers and is more cost- efficient. The bank added that it did not see any unique challenges in implementing blockchain solutions compared with other technologies.

A significant indication that blockchain is being embraced by banks came from JP Morgan, when they announced their blockchain project, JPM Coin. It has already been approved by 75 banks, such as Santander Bank, in order to enhance the testing process. JP Morgan believes it will help to reduce costs, increase security and improve the speed of financial transactions.

 

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Other sectors
A number of countries, such as Estonia, Slovenia, Malta, UAE and France, are actively promoting blockchain technology by implementing positive regulation and encouraging start-ups to set up in their countries. They clearly see the benefit that the reduction of transactions and middlemen can bring with a database that is apparently tamper-proof and auditable.

There is a particular focus on cybersecurity. As universities, governments, companies and major projects add more security cameras and sensors that require communication of data across device networks, there is an increased

need to protect their networks from hackers. This is also true of the internet of things, which sees devices such as fridges, coffee machines and heaters sending data across networks.

Cybersecurity in retail is another area that blockchain could help. Retailers have a long history of using prepaid and loyalty cards, and blockchain provides an excellent opportunity to offer a more secure gift card and loyalty programme that is not exposed to the same data breaches from hacking incidents that has plagued the industry for years. Many suggest that blockchain could also be the solution that Elon Musk needs to get autonomous cars on the road. The threat of terrorists hacking self-driving cars, robots, drones or automated transportation systems in itself is a scenario that would strike fear in any government. Blockchain could provide a solution not only

to the hacking threat but also to potential accidents arising from other challenges too, such as the current lack of accuracy of verifying of data collected from the surrounding environment and potential downtimes and systems failures that are inherent in a centralised network.

Challenges

One of the major drawbacks of the technology is the need for mining, which essentially requires computing power. It has been estimated that during a week, the entire blockchain network consumes energy on a par with the total amount of electricity used by Hungary – or 0.25 per cent of the entire planet’s energy needs. Recent research estimated that mining could account for 1 per cent of global energy usage by 2020, an amount that would increase rapidly through mass adoption. Blockchain technology is

Screen Shot 2019-09-25 at 21.06.56improving and a number of updates have already made many blockchains more energy efficient. Nonetheless, it should be a concern for governments looking to reduce carbon emissions. Regulation could be introduced to ensure that mining companies adhere to strict renewable energy requirements, although this will also potentially shift mining activities to countries who have less stringent rules on mining activity (and cheaper electricity).

A fully decentralised system would enable users to trade, transfer and receive money directly without intermediaries. It could be argued that some intermediaries may be seriously exposed financially or resist the technology. As a result of this, and in countries or cities largely reliant on the financial sector, unemployment rates could rise, and policymakers therefore need to think about whether creating new roles for intermediaries may be possible in order to avoid this scenario.

 

There is also the matter of investor and customer protection to consider. The existing centralised financial system has a level of trust built into it that protects money in events such as bankruptcy, fraud or in the event of the death of a family member. This level of protection does not exist in a decentralised system. It seems as though the most likely scenario is a semi-decentralised system, which could therefore still be potentially more vulnerable to cyberattack.

What about GDPR?

A major area of concern for all businesses over the past couple of years has been the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), introduced in May 2018 to increase people’s data privacy. It presents a possible stumbling block for blockchain implementation. The major areas of conflict include the fact that blockchain would hold personal data that is publicly accessible at the same time as not allowing for changes, such as deletion as per requirements of GDPR under “the right to be forgotten”.

This is a direct clash of function. However, by ensuring that the blockchain does not hold any personal details, such as individual names, there may be a way to get around this problem. Additionally, GDPR does not aim at regulating technologies as such, but regulates how organisations use these technologies.

Both GDPR and blockchain’s main focus is the protection of data, something which blockchain does very well as we have already discussed, and as a result, while initially it may seem that they are incompatible, blockchain could actually be a potential solution to meeting the GDPR requirements of encryption. Additionally, one of the reasons for the existence of GDPR was the misuse of data by major corporations, something that the decentralised nature of blockchain totally removes from the equation.

The same, but different

A blockchain future with levels of security we have previously not been used to seems difficult to imagine.

We have grown accustomed to major cyberattacks and breaches. While blockchain, if embraced and implemented properly, is certain to reduce these attacks significantly,
we will still be faced with a fact not yet mentioned in this article. Ninety per cent of cyberattacks come from human error and social engineering – a risk that blockchain would be unable to remove. As technology moves forward, humans seem to be unable to adapt quickly enough. The staggering speed of innovation could mean that while the future may turn out to be very different to today, many of the same old threats could remain.

This article was written by Alexander Larsen CFIRM, president of Baldwin Global Risk Services Ltd, and Faisal Alnahdy, senior auditor at the State Audit Institution in Oman. It is based on Alnahdy’s MSc dissertation, “Evaluation of risks associated with cryptocurrency: case study on Oman”, which he wrote at Glasgow Caledonian University.

Why 90% of ICO’s fail (and much of the rest, including STO’s may follow)

This article was originally Published by the Institute of Risk Management’s ERM Magazine & Blocktribune.com

The ICO Boom

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The ICO space saw a boom in the last couple of years and has been looked upon as a valid alternative to Initial Public Offerings. Less regulation, more opportunity for the average investor to “get in early” and the excitement of new technology and a movement.

I recently had the pleasure of meeting up with a number of companies in the crypto space and they all suggested that we are seeing a revolt against IPO’s due to investments being heavily in favour of venture capitalist getting the most out of it. This has seen a huge rise in ICO’s and expected to see the same for STO’s. Aside from raising funds, a major benefit of these token offerings is that it has brought in a community and supporters.

This has been extremely positive for them and has brought enthusiasm and motivation to all involved including token holders. As an example, a few companies have between 3000-8000 members of which ¼ are active every 30 days. An impressive figure for smaller crypto companies and one that shows the enthusiasm that token offerings can bring.

More recently, ICO’s are being seen as purely speculative and a money making opportunity. Additionally they are being looked upon with scepticism by investors and regulators alike. This has a lot to do with the huge number of ICO’s being launched, often with no real vision or potential product, as well as outright scams. As if it wasn’t already difficult enough to meet such aspirational objectives with the myriad of technological issues they face, these additional pressures only make it more difficult for ICO’s with a genuine and innovative proposition to prosper or survive

Due to a number of scams (80% of ICO’s are now considered to have been scams according to a study by Statis Group) and the crash of the crypto market however, there has been the creation of a new form of ICO. a hybrid between traditional IPO’s and ICO’s. These are called Security Token Offerings (STO’s) and have more stringent requirements and regulation to follow.

With 80% having been scams, it leaves the leftover 20% of ICO’s to be successful, however according to a number of studies, 50% of these fail with the verdict still out on the rest. That means a whopping 90% have failed (if you include the scams). What does it mean for the other 10% and why do so many fail?

 

Technological Challenges

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The fact that this is a new space based around innovation and firsts, makes the technological challenges numerous and difficult to predict. This has also been the case for a number of the companies I spoke with. One smaller company has employees based globally in over 10 countries with 8 of them being based at the Headquarters.

A couple of the companies were set up between 5 – 10 years ago with a specific vision. Whilst It was initially expected to take 2-3 years, the vision remains. The fact it has taken so long to make progress is an indication of the technological challenges that the space faces.

Many companies in the crypto space focus on timescales but the companies I spoke to by their own admission, realise these timescales were not so accurate.

“It’s always difficult to predict new technology like this and you can never be sure what problems you will face.” one CIO suggested. As a result, a few of the companies have decided to stay away from timelines although this type of honesty is rare in the space and can also be seen as a weakness by the typical cryptocurrency investors who demand timelines (whether unrealistic or not).

 

Building strong foundations

The recent ICO boom, which has seen thousands of new ICOs and some huge funding raised, means that many companies don’t have time or the possibility to be so transparent and honest. Their investors expect immediate results, and being a speculative market, they care more about their token price than the technology or results produced. This has put additional pressure on companies to overpromise and launch unfinished products too soon.

Some companies do focus more on product however. Two companies I spoke to have seen their product take longer than many new ICO’s to launch or progress. The reasoning for this is, that unlike many companies who simply launch their product after ironing out only a few teething problems, these particular companies have been determined to get the bigger more complex problems resolved as a priority before launching anything.

The trouble with launching a product early is that it causes major difficulties down the line when the larger problems make themselves known and they need to resolve these issues within the confines or parameters of the design they have already launched.

“By solving the fundamentals we can ensure we are less likely to be disrupted. The downside is that it appears you are moving backwards and slower than competitors. Mostly however, others are only making incremental changes to an existing flawed design” says one CIO.

So what are the key risks to survival in the coming years for these companies?

 

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Risks and challenges in the space:

Below are just some of the key risk areas the companies I have spoken to face going forward, and which I believe all ICO’s and STO’s need to be in a position to manage:

1.   Funding related risks:This is the nature of the business. With much of the work being research and development based as opposed to creation of an immediate product, initial funding, ongoing funding and future funding remains a key risk to the industry.

2.   Regulation related risks: I have written several articles on regulation and self-regulation (see riskguide.wordpress.com for these articles) and it is a major concern to companies in the space.

As an example, for many companies, a major part of their envisaged product would be encryption or privacy. Therefore, The UK’s Prime Minister, Teresa May’s current focus on access to information, would potentially require banning encryption.

“This is only the beginning and with the rise of ICO’s it is probably an important and necessary step as not everyone is fully equipped to understand what they are investing in. There needs to be a middle ground in terms of regulation. Too little doesn’t offer protection. Too much stifles innovation.” suggests a CEO of one crypto company who is open to regulation.

There are upsides to regulation too however, which I have suggested in previous articles. China’s move for example, can be taken as quite positive in terms of coming out and taking a definitive stand which should encourage other governments to do the same. It essentially removes uncertainty. Uncertainty is the source of so many risks and often a negative certainty is better than uncertainty as it allows a focus within set parameters.

One CEO suggests that if regulation was introduced it could make their job easier:

“If we knew what was coming we could work around it but when its uncertain we can’t prepare properly.”

Many countries are also encouraging blockchain and ICO investment by implementing clear regulation that is often positive. Slovenia and Malta are just some examples of countries encouraging growth.

3.  Exchanges related risks: Many coins and tokens are on various exchanges globally but 90% of volume may be on one specific exchange, such as on a US based exchange for example. If that exchange shuts down (hacking incident, new regulations, and business decisions) their coin could be heavily impacted

4.    Assets: This is no doubt a concern for many companies. There needs to be a balance between having your assets in crypto currency and cash. Some would argue that you should keep it in the currency you trade with, but others would say Bitcoin increases so much and is a better long term investment. It is however also very volatile. Additionally, there is 18 trillion dollars in circulation vs 66 billion Bitcoin. So it is therefore easier to manipulate the Bitcoin market.

5.  Product completion – too many ICO’s and STO’s have a vision that is just unachievable. The scales and promises are too grand. Not only do deadlines get missed but a product never seems to be anywhere near completion. Whilst investors will “HODL” (a term used in the cryptocurrency community for holding a coin no matter how low the price gets and for the long term) as long as possible, when products don’t see the light of day and no progress seems to be being made, it spells trouble.

In these situations, communication is key! Keeping investors up-to-date with progress helps. Mostly however, unless you have achievable objectives, you are doomed to fail. During the height of the crypto and ICO mania, it was difficult to set achievable objectives. These wouldn’t excite investors. Now that the cryptocurrency market is down 90% however, investors are beginning to look for the few who might actually achieve what they set out to do.

6.  Lack of use cases, competition and traditional alternatives:going hand-in-hand with product completion is use case. whilst some companies may go on to develop and launch a working product, the use case for these products is often limited. Firstly, a product has to solve a current problem. If it doesn’t, it’s unlikely anyone will use it.

If it doesn’t solve a problem you face the reality of competing against traditional alternatives. “But it’s on the blockchain” doesn’t cut it as most users of software or social media or any other technology don’t care what’s running it. Most don’t know what blockchain is and couldn’t care less. If it doesn’t improve their user experience and it doesn’t have as many users, or if it’s too difficult to migrate, then they aren’t going to swap what they currently use for this new technology. Even when using traditional technology backed by a mega company like Google, their initiative to try to compete with Facebook failed (see Google Plus)

Even if it solves a problem however, in most cases, ICO or STO backed companies are competing with the big boys. Companies like IBM who do this kind of stuff for a living. They have a large R&D centre with experienced staff and a structure that has worked for decades. They also have a large client base to sell to, something the ICO’s and STO’s can’t compete with. Moreover, these larger companies also have a large set of products with which to integrate their new technology with.

7.  Bear Market liquidity: finally, looking at this bear market where prices are down 90% or more in most cases. Many ICO’s have held onto tokens (see assets above) instead of diversifying their assets into FIAT. Many can only last a few months to a year with current spending on staff, infrastructure and having no workable product. Expect to see many cryptocurrency companies fail during 2019 if prices don’t pick up!

It is for the above reasons that risk management and having advisors or non-executive directors with the right risk management experience is so critical for companies in the space. It can help drive success sustainability. An article I wrote highlights how:  https://riskguide.wordpress.com/2018/12/07/crypto-the-failed-ico-risk-can-help-icos-stand-out-from-the-crowd-and-drive-success/

 

The early day challenges of ICO’s (2013-2015)

Whilst the above risks are certain to be relevant to many ICOs, it’s interesting to see some of the more interesting challenges of the last five years that early crypto companies faced, that whilst not specifically relevant nowadays, at a higher level still remain very much a top risk :

  1. Combination of getting the right people and funding – in the early days there wasn’t the abundance of developers and programmers who were used to the technology, but at the same time there weren’t the same amount of competition as there is today either.
  2. Technology related risks – most employees are working remotely. Nowadays it’s easy to do this due to online tools such as slack, Skype, hangouts and screenshare etc. but back then it wasn’t so easy. So the business model was far more difficult. To add to this, bandwidth at the time was a real challenge. You are talking about speeds of 2 mb vs 300 mb in terms of broadband. Whilst these days you wouldn’t be concerned about bandwidth or the lack of apps, technology still remains a major risk.
  3. ICO launch related risks – these days, the technological advances have made it easier than ever to launch an ICO. The number of tools and platforms on which  to launch are increasing every day. Imagine the difficulty however for those who didn’t have such options and were trying to raise an ICO during an experimental phase. Too many coins launched, the ICO launch continuing past the deadline, and the technology it was launched on becoming obsolete were some of the examples.

Alexander Larsen can be contacted on linkedin or Twitter @alexlarsen_Risk

Visit riskguide for more technology and risk related articles: www.riskguide.wordpress.com

Small Countries Compete for Crypto as Major Regulators Mull Crackdown

Originally Published on CryptoNews, April 08, 2018 and written By

Smaller countries are taking advantage of the widespread crackdown on cryptocurrency exchanges by ushering in liberal legislation that aims to entice investors to their shores.

It comes after major governments around the world introduced strict crypto regulation and, in some cases, completely banned Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs) following a series of high-profile scams.

It was recently revealed that Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange by traded value, is planning to open an office in Malta. The company had an office in Japan and tried to get a license to operate there, but decided to move to the European island to avoid a clash with local regulators.

Meanwhile, South Korea has put the brakes on its anti-crypto drive after regulations banning ICOs and trading for youths and foreign passport holders sparked a backlash against the government.

Emergence of ICO hubs

For smaller countries, there is a lot to gain from positioning themselves as the ICO hub of choice.

Alexander Larsen, president, Europe & Middle East at Baldwin Risk Services, an enterprise risk management firm, told Cryptonews.com that several small countries are actively looking at how to attract ICOs. They include Malta, Slovenia, Estonia and Switzerland.

 

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Switzerland, for example, published guidelines earlier this year that aim to assist ICOs in navigating its “principles-based” regulatory framework. The country was home to the record-breaking USD 232 million Tezos ICO last year.

Other countries are encouraging investors by deciding not to tax income from cryptocurrencies. They include Germany, Denmark, Singapore, Belarus and Slovenia.

“I think countries who have a tech hub that doesn’t embrace ICOs will be questioning whether their tech will start lagging behind other, ICO-driven countries,” Larsen said. “In particular, I think all those countries who thrive on banking and their offshore status will be trying to attract ICOs because there’s no doubt ICOs will provide a real financial gain for the country.”

Avoiding the Wild West

Just because a country has extensive regulation, it doesn’t necessarily mean it won’t attract ICOs. Larsen pointed out that a country with no regulation could easily legislate the following year, thus hampering the ICO’s plans.

“As long as it’s positive regulation that is robust and ICO friendly, with the right investor protections in place, that’s a positive thing,” he added.

Nenad Gregec, compliance officer at Etherum-based investment platform ICONOMI, which is registered in Malta, said his company leans towards countries where regulation exists but is not too strict.

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Gregec suggested that countries in Europe who lost out to Silicon Valley in the tech boom want to be early adopters of crypto so they don’t miss out again.

He added: “I expect more countries will follow Malta and Switzerland in setting up a legal framework. There might be competition, but eventually we will see harmonization. The European Union has a very good track record of harmonizing regulation in the financial sector.”
Waiting for the G20

It is likely regulation will continue to be fragmented until the G20 nations make a definitive decision on crypto and how to move forward.
David Coker, lecturer in accounting, finance and governance at Westminster Business School, told Cryptonews.com, that the G20 has been “bumbling around” and still lacks a cogent view on the future of crypto.

He added: “If ICO regulation is light-touch that would give crypto investing a degree of legitimacy. But if it goes down the US route, which treats crypto platforms like a security requiring authorization, ICOs wouldn’t be happy because they are very fast-moving and don’t want the additional costs.”

For now, the future regulatory environment is uncertain, but one thing is for sure – smaller countries with a lot to gain will be keeping a close eye on the developments to ensure they stay ahead of the competition.