LONDON (Reuters) – Britain’s financial watchdog said on Tuesday it will ban the sale to retail investors of products that track the price of cryptoassets like Bitcoin, saying most people lose money on them.
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said there is no reliable basis for valuing cryptoassets that underpin derivatives and exchange-traded notes.
The ban will come into force on Jan. 6, 2021.
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The watchdog set out proposals for the ban in a public consultation last year, and said on Tuesday it will save retail investors 53 million pounds ($69 million).
There is a prevalence of market abuse and financial crime, along with extreme volatility in prices, and lack of legitimate need to invest in such products, the FCA said.
“Significant price volatility, combined with the inherent difficulties of valuing cryptoassets reliably, places retail consumers at a high risk of suffering losses from trading crypto-derivatives,” said Sheldon Mills, interim executive director for strategy and competition at the FCA.
“We have evidence of this happening on a significant scale.”
The FCA said the products were popular with young male investors in particular, and that most respondents to its consultation opposed a ban, arguing that cryptoassets have intrinsic value, with Bitcoin accepted by companies like Starbucks
“We remain of the view that the price of cryptoassets is determined by sentiment and speculative behaviour,” the FCA said.
($1 = 0.7714 pounds)
(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Susan Fenton)