Central bankers weigh up Facebook’s libra plan

Senior member of Swiss National Bank ‘open-minded’ about cryptocurrency plan

Facebook’s cryptocurrency libra is set to launch in the first half of 2020. Photograph: Dado Ruvic/Illustration/Reuters
Facebook’s cryptocurrency libra is set to launch in the first half of 2020. Photograph: Dado Ruvic/Illustration/Reuters

A senior member of the Swiss National Bank said he was open-minded about Facebook's cryptocurrency project, while an Italian official looked for more information as central bankers try to get to grips with the initiative.

Facebook revealed plans last week to launch libra, the latest development in its effort to expand beyond social networking and move into ecommerce and global payments.

"Overall I think it's an interesting development and I'm pretty relaxed about it," Thomas Moser, an alternate member of the Swiss National Bank's governing board, said at the Crypto Valley Conference in Zug.

“They have clearly indicated that they are willing to play according to the rules, they have been contacting the regulators,” Mr Moser added.

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How regulators of the international financial system respond to the libra project, which Facebook aims to launch by the first half of 2020, will have a crucial impact on its prospects.

The cryptocurrency must respect anti-money laundering regulations and its backers must seek licences if it offers banking services, France’s central bank chief said in a magazine interview.

Domenico Gammaldi, head of the Bank of Italy's head of market and payment system oversight, said he wanted more information on the project.

“I’ve read more than 200 pages of comments, and it’s very strange for me to give a personal opinion on 12 pages in the white paper,” Mr Gammaldi said on Tuesday.

“The white paper, that means ‘white,’ without any information.”

Facebook has linked with 28 partners in a Geneva-based entity called the Libra Association, which will govern its new digital coin set to launch in the first half of 2020, according to marketing materials and interviews with executives. – Reuters