Blockchain Is 'Revolutionary,' Says German Finance Regulator Chief

The president of BaFin thinks blockchain-based applications are "revolutionary" and could turn the entire financial sector "upside down."

AccessTimeIconJun 13, 2018 at 11:00 a.m. UTC
Updated Aug 18, 2021 at 9:18 p.m. UTC

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Felix Hufeld, chief of Germany's financial watchdog, has said blockchain technology is "revolutionary" and its applications could turn the entire financial sector "upside down."

Hufeld, who is president of the German Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin), made the remarks during a speech at an event in Berlin last week in which he described the regulator's thinking on bitcoin and blockchain.

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  • Despite the current hype around the bitcoin price and the boom of initial coin offerings (ICOs), he said, blockchain's ability to power distributed applications "could actually be revolutionary."

    Hufeld continued:

    "These apps are not only safe from failures of individual computers or providers, they also promote the development of a 'blockchain economy.'"

    Further, the BaFin head said blockchain applications have promise in areas that lack "an effective control mechanisms or trustworthy institutions" such as in foreign trade or development aid.

    The speech follows remarks by Hufeld in April, in which he stated that he does not want to "kill innovation" in blockchain, though his agency is beefing up efforts to regulate cryptocurrency trading over money-laundering concerns, according to a report at the time.

    BaFin also issued new guidelines in February outlining how and when it would consider tokens issued during ICOs to be securities, saying it would take a case-by-case approach in determining the legal status of individual tokens.

    BaFin image via Shutterstock

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