Context:
A recent Financial Action Task Force (FATF) report highlights that stablecoins have emerged as the primary medium for illicit virtual asset transactions globally.
Key Highlights:
- Key Findings of FATF Report
- Stablecoins account for ~84% of illicit crypto transaction volume (2025).
- Criminals prefer them due to:
- Price stability (pegged to fiat like USD)
- Ability to preserve value of illegal funds
- Security & Geopolitical Concerns
- State-linked actors (North Korea, Iran) using stablecoins (e.g., USDT) for:
- Sanctions evasion
- Weapons procurement
- Proliferation financing
- Regulatory & Systemic Gaps
- Large transactions occur via unhosted (self-custody) wallets outside AML frameworks.
- Cross-chain transfers obscure transaction trails.
- Weak capacity of issuers to:
- Freeze or burn illicit assets quickly.
- Recommended Measures
- Customer Due Diligence (CDD) during redemption.
- Mandatory:
- Deny-lists (blacklists) for illicit wallets
- Allow-lists (whitelists) where required
- Enforcement of FATF Travel Rule:
- Mandatory sharing of sender & receiver details.
- Full implementation of FATF Recommendation 15 (R-15):
- Covers VASPs, custodians, issuers.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Stablecoin: Cryptocurrency pegged to fiat/commodity/asset.
- FATF: Intergovernmental body combating money laundering & terror financing.
- VASP (Virtual Asset Service Provider): Exchanges, wallet providers, etc.
- Travel Rule: Requires transaction transparency in crypto transfers.
- AML (Anti-Money Laundering): Framework to detect and prevent illegal financial flows.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Challenges in regulating decentralized finance (DeFi).
- Need for global coordination in crypto regulation.
- Risks to financial stability and national security.
- Balancing innovation vs regulatory oversight.
- Way Forward
- Strengthen global crypto regulatory frameworks.
- Enhance blockchain monitoring and forensic capabilities.
- Promote compliance among stablecoin issuers and exchanges.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS III: Economy (Digital Currency, Financial Security)
- GS II: Global Governance
