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FATF urges faster crypto AML enforcement as stablecoin crime increases

Created at 16 Jul · 12:16 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) warned that criminals are increasingly exploiting stablecoins for illicit finance, urging jurisdictions to accelerate crypto AML standard implementation as regulatory gaps are exploited.

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Key Numbers

83%jurisdictions with Travel Rule law
73%jurisdictions with Travel Rule law (year prior)

Who's Involved

FATF
global anti-money laundering watchdog

↳ Why This Matters

The FATF's call for faster enforcement highlights the growing challenge regulators face in keeping pace with illicit actors exploiting crypto, particularly stablecoins, for criminal purposes, potentially impacting the integrity of the global financial system.

Key facts

  • Criminals are increasingly using stablecoins for illicit finance, with most on-chain criminal activity involving dollar-pegged cryptocurrencies.
  • Criminal networks are developing proprietary stablecoins to evade asset freezes.
  • The FATF urged countries to speed up the implementation of crypto Anti-Money Laundering (AML) standards.
  • 83% of surveyed jurisdictions have incorporated the FATF Travel Rule into their laws.
  • Many jurisdictions are failing to effectively supervise and enforce existing AML frameworks.
  • Offshore crypto service providers and Decentralized Finance (DeFi) pose ongoing challenges for regulators.

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) has issued a warning that criminals are increasingly leveraging stablecoins for illicit financial activities, with dollar-pegged cryptocurrencies now involved in the majority of identified on-chain criminal transactions. The global watchdog noted in its latest report that criminal networks are also developing their own stablecoins designed to circumvent asset freezes and seizures. The FATF is urging countries to expedite the implementation of its Anti-Money Laundering (AML) standards for cryptocurrencies to address these evolving threats.

According to the report, while 83% of surveyed jurisdictions have now enacted the FATF Travel Rule into law—an increase from 73% in the previous year—many are still struggling to translate these legal frameworks into effective supervision and enforcement mechanisms. The Travel Rule mandates that financial institutions and virtual asset service providers share sender and receiver information for cross-border crypto transactions exceeding a specified threshold, typically $1,000 or 1,000 euros, to combat money laundering and terrorist financing.

The FATF also highlighted ongoing difficulties jurisdictions face in dealing with offshore crypto service providers and in assessing the risks associated with Decentralized Finance (DeFi), which it identified as a potential growing regulatory blind spot.

Frequently asked questions

The FATF, or Financial Action Task Force, is a global anti-money laundering watchdog that sets international standards for combating financial crime.

The FATF Travel Rule requires virtual asset service providers to share sender and receiver information for crypto transactions above a certain threshold to prevent money laundering and terrorist financing.

The FATF notes that criminals are increasingly using stablecoins for illicit finance and are developing proprietary tokens to evade asset freezes.

What Happens Next

01Jurisdictions are expected to enhance supervision and enforcement of crypto AML standards.
02Further regulatory attention is anticipated for offshore crypto providers and DeFi risks.

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Cadence

How It Developed

Criminal networks are increasingly exploiting stablecoins for illicit finance.
Criminal networks are developing proprietary stablecoins to resist freezing.
FATF urged jurisdictions to accelerate crypto AML standard implementation.
% of surveyed jurisdictions have adopted the Travel Rule into law.
Many jurisdictions have yet to translate legal frameworks into effective supervision and enforcement.
Jurisdictions continue to struggle with offshore crypto service providers and assessing DeFi risks.

Sources

T1
FATF urges faster crypto AML enforcement as stablecoin crime increasesThe global task force said criminal networks are using stablecoins and developing proprietary tokens to evade asset freezes as countries struggle to enforce crypto AML rules.Cointelegraph

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