With the Cryptoasset Market Regulation (Mica) is about to2024Year6moon30Effective today, major cryptocurrency exchanges such asBinance、KrakenandOKXis considering delisting it from its European platformTetherofUSDT. Binance (Binance) announced that it will beMicaAfter taking effect, users in the European Economic Area will be restricted from using unauthorized stablecoins, and users will be gradually guided to use regulated stablecoins. While existing unlicensed stablecoins will not be delisted, they will be set to “sell only” mode to allow users to convert to Bitcoin, regulated stablecoins, or fiat currencies.
At the same time, member states are adapting their laws and regulatory frameworks to comply withMicastandard. Some countries have begun toMicatraining regulators on their implementation and establishing the technical infrastructure to support enforcement of new regulations.
European UnionMicaAct, most of the provisions start from2024Year12moon30It will be implemented on 1st, and some special provisions will be implemented in advance.2024Year6moon30Japan, there are also technical provisions since2023Year6moon29Effective from date. This phased implementation arrangement is designed to ensure that the market has sufficient time to prepare and adjust, ensuring a smooth transition and orderly development of the crypto asset market. (In phases, the period is12arrive18months). As shown below:
The bill mainly covers the following main contents:
AiyingAiying will analyze it through nine modulesMicabill:
Here is a supplement to the Cryptoasset Market Regulations (MiCA) on Asset Reference Tokens (ARTs) and Electronic Money Tokens (EMTs),Cryptoasset service provider (CASP, Crypto-asset Service Providers)Specific dollar amounts and other related requirements are set. The following are the specific amounts and requirements:
(1) Asset Reference Tokens (ARTs)
ARTs are stablecoins whose value is pegged to multiple currencies, commodities, or other cryptoassets. MiCA’s specific requirements for ARTs include:
(2) Electronic Money Tokens (EMTs)
EMTs are stablecoins whose value is pegged to a single fiat currency. MiCA’s specific requirements for EMTs include:
Reserve Requirements: IssueEMTsThe company must hold an equivalent amount of fiat currency reserves to ensure the stability of the token. The reserve should equal or exceed the total value of issued tokens.
Amount limit:singleEMTThe daily trading volume shall not exceed5million euros. ifEMTmarket value exceeds5billion euros, issuing companies are required to report to regulators and take additional compliance measures.
(3) Crypto-asset Service Providers (CASP, Crypto-asset Service Providers)
Need to comply with plans regarding its governance, asset custody, complaints handling, outsourcing, liquidation (wind-down plans), information disclosure and, most importantly, minimum prudential requirements.——CASPs A permanent minimum capital is required to be maintained (“own funds”):
The EU Crypto-Asset Market Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 in terms of transparency and disclosure requirements ensures that through detailed white paper writing and publishing processes, strict information update requirements, and standardized marketing materials,The market transparency of project issuance protects the rights and interests of investors. The following are the project issuance requirements details:
1, license application
(1) Application qualifications:
(2), application documents:
(3), review process:
(1) Compliance operations:
(2) Cross-border services:
(3) Manage change and business expansion:
(4) Regular supervision and inspection:
(5) Violation handling:
(1) Information transparency:
(2) Treat fairly:
(3)Risk Disclosure:
(1) Independent hosting:
(2) Compensation mechanism:
(3) Transparent pricing:
(1)Customer information collection:
(2) Risk warning:
(3) Periodic evaluation:
4.Customer complaint handling
(1) Complaint Handling Procedure:
(2) Complaint Transparency:
1.Insider trading prevention
(1) Definition of inside information:
(2) Prohibition of Insider Trading:
(3) Punishment measures:
(1) Definition of market manipulation:
Market manipulation includes, but is not limited to, the following behaviors:
(2) Typical market manipulation behaviors:
(1) Precautions:
(2) Detection and Reporting:
(3) Cross-border cooperation:
(1) Scope of violations:
(2) Punishment measures:
(3) particularly severe penalties:
If it is a particularly serious violation, such as multiple violations or a serious impact on market stability, the competent authority may:
(1) Open and transparent:
(2) Protect privacy:
(1) Enforcement fines:
(2)Purpose of fine:
(1)Appeal Procedure:
Through these international cooperation and coordination of regulatory measures, the EU hopes to ensure the regulatory consistency and effectiveness of crypto asset markets on a global scale. Transnational violations can be better prevented and combated through close cooperation and information sharing with regulators in other countries
(1) Cooperation within the EU:
(2) Information sharing:
(1) Cooperation with regulatory authorities in non-EU countries:
(2) Security of information exchange:
(1) to coordinate and promote cooperation:
(2) Develop technical standards:
(1) Transnational Investigation and Surveillance:
(2) Solve cooperation problems:
Impact 1: Privacy coins are removed from the shelves
Crypto-assets with built-in anonymity features (such as “privacy coins” such as Monero, Zcash, etc.) will only be allowed onto trading platforms if CASP or relevant regulatory authorities can identify the token holders and their trading history. Since this is de facto impossible, EU-regulated cryptocurrency exchanges are expected to remove privacy coins from their products.
Impact 2: Those who have obtained relevant European licensesCASPwill be easier to obtainMicalicense
Already licensed under the national frameworkCASPs will benefit from a streamlined MiCA authorization process and have up to 18 months to obtain a final MiCA license. For example, regulated crypto custodians in Germany may benefit from these simplified procedures and transitional measures. However, CASPs licensed only by MiCA will have the opportunity to provide services throughout the EU single market through so-called cross-regional licensing. This is why most cryptocurrency businesses are expected to apply for MiCA authorization as soon as possible.
Impact 3: Unifying the European market
The MiCA regulations will bring unified supervision, enhance competitiveness and promote institutional development. Until now, EU crypto companies had to apply to regulators in each country if they wanted to serve the entire EU market, resulting in high costs and cumbersome processes. Under MiCA, the same binding EU requirements will apply to all 27 member states. Once a company obtains a MiCA license in one country, it will be able to provide licensing services across the EU single market through a “cross-region license”.
Impact 4: Offshore companies will be restricted, benefiting EU companies
Once MiCA comes into effect, offshore, unregulated companies will be unable to proactively attract EU customers. Even the rules under which foreign businesses can take on customers if contacted by EU users will become stricter. This means that crypto companies regulated by MiCA will take more EU market share from these unregulated overseas competitors.
Impact 5: MiCA promotes institutional participation and European banks accelerate their deployment
MiCA may lead to increased institutional adoption and activity in the EU crypto market. According to Bloomberg data, only 4% of European institutional funds are exposed to crypto assets. Regulatory uncertainty is one of the main concerns preventing institutions from entering this space. It is expected that within the next 48 months, major European banks will launch crypto-asset services, whether it is custody, trading, or the issuance of e-money tokens or asset reference tokens.
Impact 6: MiCA’s impact on stablecoin issuers
MiCA’s new regulatory rules will givebyTetherStablecoin issuers represented by poses significant compliance challenges, especially given that Tether has not been able to fully disclose the status and composition of its reserves, nor has it been fully audited by an authoritative independent agency. Tether has also been involved in multiple lawsuits and investigations, including an $18.5 million settlement with the New York State Attorney General’s Office and a rumored investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice into alleged bank fraud, money laundering, and illegal operations. In the future, stablecoin issuers represented by Tether will face greater compliance reform costs.
In order to deal with these challenges, Tether should actively promote its own compliance process and establish good cooperative relations with EU regulatory agencies and third-party audit institutions to improve its market credibility and competitiveness. In the face of increasingly stringent regulatory requirements, Tether has taken measures to advance the compliance process. For example, Tether recently announced that it will cooperate with the Italian branch of BDO International, the world’s fifth largest accounting firm, which will be responsible for auditing the company’s reserve guarantee and attestation reports, and plans to change the frequency of issuing audit reports from quarterly to per month.
Under the framework of MiCA, stablecoin issuance will become more compliant and transparent. Stablecoin issuers such as Tether need to accelerate compliance processes to adapt to the new regulatory environment and remain competitive in the EU market.
Impact 7: MiCA on Defiinfluence
MiCA applies to businesses – natural and legal persons and “certain other businesses”. “Other businesses” may include entities that are not legally incorporated, but the EU has clarified that decentralized DAOs and protocols are not targeted. Paragraph 22 of MiCA clarifies that “crypto-asset services shall not fall within the scope of this Regulation if they are provided in a fully decentralized manner without the need for any intermediaries.” This core statement has been made public multiple times by key officials from the European Commission and Parliament Statement of support.
However, the devil is in the details. The bill proposes that MiCA may apply even if some activities or services are performed in a decentralized manner. This means that if there are certain parts or links in a DeFi project that are not fully decentralized, they may still need to comply with the relevant regulations of MiCA.
How much decentralization (technical, governance, legal, etc.) is required to stay out of scope? It is an unambiguous subjective judgment. I expect some enforcement and litigation cases will arise around this issue. The EU is generally reluctant to enforce their laws in other countries, but if some DeFi projects are nominally decentralized but are actually centralized and are located in Europe or provide services to EU users, the EU will Special attention.
DeFi projects have two options if they want to be outside the scope:
However, when the EU formulated regulations for traditional financial companies, it considered true decentralizationDeFiProject exclusion is commendable. ifMicaIt would be great news if some of it could become a global standard.
Impact 8: Challenges and Uncertainty
However, the actual success of MiCA is highly dependent on the implementation standards and enforcement practices developed by EU regulators over the next 12-18 months. Some provisions may impose burdens on industry participants, the full impact of which will only be apparent once technical implementation standards provide practical guidance.
Impact 9: High compliance costs and hindered innovation
Like the recent situation in Hong Kong, compliance costs are too high, companies are fleeing, andMicaThe compliance costs ofStablecoin issuers bypass the EU, and exchanges face disclosure requirements and responsibilities that are too onerous to deliver benefits to consumers, making their products less competitive than offshore rivals. EU consumers will either be cut off from innovation or continue to use (and be exposed to) the largest pool of offshore liquidity and utility. Furthermore, regulators may decide that most NFT and DeFi projects are actually within the scope of MiCA and need to comply – a door that the current MiCA preamble remains open to interpretation. This will inevitably lead to the migration of teams and resources outside the EU.
Mica Possible to become the leader in cryptocurrency fieldGDPR, that is, a regulatory standard widely adopted around the world, but this is not yet a foregone conclusion.
It is undeniable that MiCA will have a significant impact on their crypto-asset frameworks in other jurisdictions, especially those with less experience in financial regulation and supervision. Many concepts have been inspired by MiCA in recent Financial Stability Board (FSB) recommendations for crypto service providers and the “Global Stablecoin Arrangement.”
The EU market is the largest internal market in the world, with 450 million relatively affluent consumers. Due to its market size, MiCA will prompt many companies around the world to adopt MiCA’s operational standards and possibly even adapt them internationally to maintain consistency in global operations and products. The global impact of EU regulatory standards has been observed across multiple industries, from chemicals to agriculture to technology, a phenomenon that Columbia Law School professor Anu Bradford calls the “Brussels effect.”
Current U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) commissioner Caroline Pham warned: “As the United States struggles to provide regulatory clarity for the domestic crypto industry, a global regulatory framework like MiCA may fill this void.”
As the U.S. crypto-asset regulatory vacuum continues, expect the MiCA standard to have growing global influence.
Ultimately, however, MiCA’s practical success is key, and much of the practical implementation work still lies ahead. If MiCA proves viable for industry, consumers and regulators, it will have a global impact. Otherwise, many jurisdictions may choose entirely different policy paths.Only time and the market can tell.
After the complete collapse of FTX, even the most staunch crypto maximalists had to admit that some form of sensible regulation was needed to move the space forward and prevent the worst frauds.
As far as Aiying has been researching bills in various regions and serving customers in the past few years, the MiCA bill should be the most comprehensive crypto-asset regulatory framework we have seen globally. It should be a reference for many other countries and regions. Aiying will continue to pay attention to the updates of the bill, and we will make dynamic updates on the Aiying official website for the latest news.
Partners who want to get the report can add the following WeChat to get it
Aiying provides comprehensive crypto payment compliance, license subscription, RBA anti-money laundering risk control, fund establishment and a series of compliance solutions related to virtual assets. The team has provided various related services to more than 100 different types of crypto and traditional financial companies, and can provide feasible compliance opinions and solutions at the actual operational level.
This article is reproduced from [AiYing Compliance], the copyright belongs to the original author [Aiying Aiying], if you have any objections to the reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team, and the team will handle it as soon as possible according to relevant procedures.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article represent only the author’s personal views and do not constitute any investment advice.
Other language versions of the article are translated by the Gate Learn team and are not mentioned in Gate.io, the translated article may not be reproduced, distributed or plagiarized.
With the Cryptoasset Market Regulation (Mica) is about to2024Year6moon30Effective today, major cryptocurrency exchanges such asBinance、KrakenandOKXis considering delisting it from its European platformTetherofUSDT. Binance (Binance) announced that it will beMicaAfter taking effect, users in the European Economic Area will be restricted from using unauthorized stablecoins, and users will be gradually guided to use regulated stablecoins. While existing unlicensed stablecoins will not be delisted, they will be set to “sell only” mode to allow users to convert to Bitcoin, regulated stablecoins, or fiat currencies.
At the same time, member states are adapting their laws and regulatory frameworks to comply withMicastandard. Some countries have begun toMicatraining regulators on their implementation and establishing the technical infrastructure to support enforcement of new regulations.
European UnionMicaAct, most of the provisions start from2024Year12moon30It will be implemented on 1st, and some special provisions will be implemented in advance.2024Year6moon30Japan, there are also technical provisions since2023Year6moon29Effective from date. This phased implementation arrangement is designed to ensure that the market has sufficient time to prepare and adjust, ensuring a smooth transition and orderly development of the crypto asset market. (In phases, the period is12arrive18months). As shown below:
The bill mainly covers the following main contents:
AiyingAiying will analyze it through nine modulesMicabill:
Here is a supplement to the Cryptoasset Market Regulations (MiCA) on Asset Reference Tokens (ARTs) and Electronic Money Tokens (EMTs),Cryptoasset service provider (CASP, Crypto-asset Service Providers)Specific dollar amounts and other related requirements are set. The following are the specific amounts and requirements:
(1) Asset Reference Tokens (ARTs)
ARTs are stablecoins whose value is pegged to multiple currencies, commodities, or other cryptoassets. MiCA’s specific requirements for ARTs include:
(2) Electronic Money Tokens (EMTs)
EMTs are stablecoins whose value is pegged to a single fiat currency. MiCA’s specific requirements for EMTs include:
Reserve Requirements: IssueEMTsThe company must hold an equivalent amount of fiat currency reserves to ensure the stability of the token. The reserve should equal or exceed the total value of issued tokens.
Amount limit:singleEMTThe daily trading volume shall not exceed5million euros. ifEMTmarket value exceeds5billion euros, issuing companies are required to report to regulators and take additional compliance measures.
(3) Crypto-asset Service Providers (CASP, Crypto-asset Service Providers)
Need to comply with plans regarding its governance, asset custody, complaints handling, outsourcing, liquidation (wind-down plans), information disclosure and, most importantly, minimum prudential requirements.——CASPs A permanent minimum capital is required to be maintained (“own funds”):
The EU Crypto-Asset Market Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 in terms of transparency and disclosure requirements ensures that through detailed white paper writing and publishing processes, strict information update requirements, and standardized marketing materials,The market transparency of project issuance protects the rights and interests of investors. The following are the project issuance requirements details:
1, license application
(1) Application qualifications:
(2), application documents:
(3), review process:
(1) Compliance operations:
(2) Cross-border services:
(3) Manage change and business expansion:
(4) Regular supervision and inspection:
(5) Violation handling:
(1) Information transparency:
(2) Treat fairly:
(3)Risk Disclosure:
(1) Independent hosting:
(2) Compensation mechanism:
(3) Transparent pricing:
(1)Customer information collection:
(2) Risk warning:
(3) Periodic evaluation:
4.Customer complaint handling
(1) Complaint Handling Procedure:
(2) Complaint Transparency:
1.Insider trading prevention
(1) Definition of inside information:
(2) Prohibition of Insider Trading:
(3) Punishment measures:
(1) Definition of market manipulation:
Market manipulation includes, but is not limited to, the following behaviors:
(2) Typical market manipulation behaviors:
(1) Precautions:
(2) Detection and Reporting:
(3) Cross-border cooperation:
(1) Scope of violations:
(2) Punishment measures:
(3) particularly severe penalties:
If it is a particularly serious violation, such as multiple violations or a serious impact on market stability, the competent authority may:
(1) Open and transparent:
(2) Protect privacy:
(1) Enforcement fines:
(2)Purpose of fine:
(1)Appeal Procedure:
Through these international cooperation and coordination of regulatory measures, the EU hopes to ensure the regulatory consistency and effectiveness of crypto asset markets on a global scale. Transnational violations can be better prevented and combated through close cooperation and information sharing with regulators in other countries
(1) Cooperation within the EU:
(2) Information sharing:
(1) Cooperation with regulatory authorities in non-EU countries:
(2) Security of information exchange:
(1) to coordinate and promote cooperation:
(2) Develop technical standards:
(1) Transnational Investigation and Surveillance:
(2) Solve cooperation problems:
Impact 1: Privacy coins are removed from the shelves
Crypto-assets with built-in anonymity features (such as “privacy coins” such as Monero, Zcash, etc.) will only be allowed onto trading platforms if CASP or relevant regulatory authorities can identify the token holders and their trading history. Since this is de facto impossible, EU-regulated cryptocurrency exchanges are expected to remove privacy coins from their products.
Impact 2: Those who have obtained relevant European licensesCASPwill be easier to obtainMicalicense
Already licensed under the national frameworkCASPs will benefit from a streamlined MiCA authorization process and have up to 18 months to obtain a final MiCA license. For example, regulated crypto custodians in Germany may benefit from these simplified procedures and transitional measures. However, CASPs licensed only by MiCA will have the opportunity to provide services throughout the EU single market through so-called cross-regional licensing. This is why most cryptocurrency businesses are expected to apply for MiCA authorization as soon as possible.
Impact 3: Unifying the European market
The MiCA regulations will bring unified supervision, enhance competitiveness and promote institutional development. Until now, EU crypto companies had to apply to regulators in each country if they wanted to serve the entire EU market, resulting in high costs and cumbersome processes. Under MiCA, the same binding EU requirements will apply to all 27 member states. Once a company obtains a MiCA license in one country, it will be able to provide licensing services across the EU single market through a “cross-region license”.
Impact 4: Offshore companies will be restricted, benefiting EU companies
Once MiCA comes into effect, offshore, unregulated companies will be unable to proactively attract EU customers. Even the rules under which foreign businesses can take on customers if contacted by EU users will become stricter. This means that crypto companies regulated by MiCA will take more EU market share from these unregulated overseas competitors.
Impact 5: MiCA promotes institutional participation and European banks accelerate their deployment
MiCA may lead to increased institutional adoption and activity in the EU crypto market. According to Bloomberg data, only 4% of European institutional funds are exposed to crypto assets. Regulatory uncertainty is one of the main concerns preventing institutions from entering this space. It is expected that within the next 48 months, major European banks will launch crypto-asset services, whether it is custody, trading, or the issuance of e-money tokens or asset reference tokens.
Impact 6: MiCA’s impact on stablecoin issuers
MiCA’s new regulatory rules will givebyTetherStablecoin issuers represented by poses significant compliance challenges, especially given that Tether has not been able to fully disclose the status and composition of its reserves, nor has it been fully audited by an authoritative independent agency. Tether has also been involved in multiple lawsuits and investigations, including an $18.5 million settlement with the New York State Attorney General’s Office and a rumored investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice into alleged bank fraud, money laundering, and illegal operations. In the future, stablecoin issuers represented by Tether will face greater compliance reform costs.
In order to deal with these challenges, Tether should actively promote its own compliance process and establish good cooperative relations with EU regulatory agencies and third-party audit institutions to improve its market credibility and competitiveness. In the face of increasingly stringent regulatory requirements, Tether has taken measures to advance the compliance process. For example, Tether recently announced that it will cooperate with the Italian branch of BDO International, the world’s fifth largest accounting firm, which will be responsible for auditing the company’s reserve guarantee and attestation reports, and plans to change the frequency of issuing audit reports from quarterly to per month.
Under the framework of MiCA, stablecoin issuance will become more compliant and transparent. Stablecoin issuers such as Tether need to accelerate compliance processes to adapt to the new regulatory environment and remain competitive in the EU market.
Impact 7: MiCA on Defiinfluence
MiCA applies to businesses – natural and legal persons and “certain other businesses”. “Other businesses” may include entities that are not legally incorporated, but the EU has clarified that decentralized DAOs and protocols are not targeted. Paragraph 22 of MiCA clarifies that “crypto-asset services shall not fall within the scope of this Regulation if they are provided in a fully decentralized manner without the need for any intermediaries.” This core statement has been made public multiple times by key officials from the European Commission and Parliament Statement of support.
However, the devil is in the details. The bill proposes that MiCA may apply even if some activities or services are performed in a decentralized manner. This means that if there are certain parts or links in a DeFi project that are not fully decentralized, they may still need to comply with the relevant regulations of MiCA.
How much decentralization (technical, governance, legal, etc.) is required to stay out of scope? It is an unambiguous subjective judgment. I expect some enforcement and litigation cases will arise around this issue. The EU is generally reluctant to enforce their laws in other countries, but if some DeFi projects are nominally decentralized but are actually centralized and are located in Europe or provide services to EU users, the EU will Special attention.
DeFi projects have two options if they want to be outside the scope:
However, when the EU formulated regulations for traditional financial companies, it considered true decentralizationDeFiProject exclusion is commendable. ifMicaIt would be great news if some of it could become a global standard.
Impact 8: Challenges and Uncertainty
However, the actual success of MiCA is highly dependent on the implementation standards and enforcement practices developed by EU regulators over the next 12-18 months. Some provisions may impose burdens on industry participants, the full impact of which will only be apparent once technical implementation standards provide practical guidance.
Impact 9: High compliance costs and hindered innovation
Like the recent situation in Hong Kong, compliance costs are too high, companies are fleeing, andMicaThe compliance costs ofStablecoin issuers bypass the EU, and exchanges face disclosure requirements and responsibilities that are too onerous to deliver benefits to consumers, making their products less competitive than offshore rivals. EU consumers will either be cut off from innovation or continue to use (and be exposed to) the largest pool of offshore liquidity and utility. Furthermore, regulators may decide that most NFT and DeFi projects are actually within the scope of MiCA and need to comply – a door that the current MiCA preamble remains open to interpretation. This will inevitably lead to the migration of teams and resources outside the EU.
Mica Possible to become the leader in cryptocurrency fieldGDPR, that is, a regulatory standard widely adopted around the world, but this is not yet a foregone conclusion.
It is undeniable that MiCA will have a significant impact on their crypto-asset frameworks in other jurisdictions, especially those with less experience in financial regulation and supervision. Many concepts have been inspired by MiCA in recent Financial Stability Board (FSB) recommendations for crypto service providers and the “Global Stablecoin Arrangement.”
The EU market is the largest internal market in the world, with 450 million relatively affluent consumers. Due to its market size, MiCA will prompt many companies around the world to adopt MiCA’s operational standards and possibly even adapt them internationally to maintain consistency in global operations and products. The global impact of EU regulatory standards has been observed across multiple industries, from chemicals to agriculture to technology, a phenomenon that Columbia Law School professor Anu Bradford calls the “Brussels effect.”
Current U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) commissioner Caroline Pham warned: “As the United States struggles to provide regulatory clarity for the domestic crypto industry, a global regulatory framework like MiCA may fill this void.”
As the U.S. crypto-asset regulatory vacuum continues, expect the MiCA standard to have growing global influence.
Ultimately, however, MiCA’s practical success is key, and much of the practical implementation work still lies ahead. If MiCA proves viable for industry, consumers and regulators, it will have a global impact. Otherwise, many jurisdictions may choose entirely different policy paths.Only time and the market can tell.
After the complete collapse of FTX, even the most staunch crypto maximalists had to admit that some form of sensible regulation was needed to move the space forward and prevent the worst frauds.
As far as Aiying has been researching bills in various regions and serving customers in the past few years, the MiCA bill should be the most comprehensive crypto-asset regulatory framework we have seen globally. It should be a reference for many other countries and regions. Aiying will continue to pay attention to the updates of the bill, and we will make dynamic updates on the Aiying official website for the latest news.
Partners who want to get the report can add the following WeChat to get it
Aiying provides comprehensive crypto payment compliance, license subscription, RBA anti-money laundering risk control, fund establishment and a series of compliance solutions related to virtual assets. The team has provided various related services to more than 100 different types of crypto and traditional financial companies, and can provide feasible compliance opinions and solutions at the actual operational level.
This article is reproduced from [AiYing Compliance], the copyright belongs to the original author [Aiying Aiying], if you have any objections to the reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team, and the team will handle it as soon as possible according to relevant procedures.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article represent only the author’s personal views and do not constitute any investment advice.
Other language versions of the article are translated by the Gate Learn team and are not mentioned in Gate.io, the translated article may not be reproduced, distributed or plagiarized.