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.