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Japan Considers Significant Caps on Cryptocurrency Margin Trading

Last Updated March 4, 2021 3:03 PM
Samburaj Das
Last Updated March 4, 2021 3:03 PM

Japan’s primarily financial regulator is mulling a leverage cap on the amount of funds investors can borrow for margin trading with cryptocurrencies.

In a marked effort to clamp down on speculative trading to minimise volatility risks for investors, the Financial Services Agency (FSA) is considering leverage caps on margin trading, the Nikkei  reported on Thursday.

There are presently no restrictions on margin trading borrowing currently in domestic Japanese markets, enabling some exchanges to offer traders up to 25 times the deposit as leverage, the default upper limit margin for foreign exchange trading. By contrast, the financial regulator is reportedly considering caps between two to four times the deposits, with limits as low as 2:1 also proposed.

According to the FSA’s own data from April this year, Japan is home to over 3.5 million active cryptocurrency traders, with a majority aged from 20 to 40 years.

While annual domestic trading in bitcoin – the world’s first and most traded cryptocurrency – rose from $22 million in 2014 to $97 billion in 2017, a majority of the total domestic trading volume in 2017 occurred in derivatives trading. Margin traders represented a significant majority behind the $543 billion traded in 2017.

The Nikkei report adds that seven of the sixteen licensed cryptocurrency exchanges provide margin-trading platforms. Incidentally, a self-regulatory body representing those licensed exchange operators has already enforced a 4-to-1 limit on margin trading earlier in July.

“This is just a provisional measure — I don’t think a ratio of 4 is adequate,” Japan Virtual Currency Exchange Association (JVCEA) chair Taizen Okuyama said.

The JVCEA now has the ability to monitor and self-regulate the sixteen licensed exchanges after being approved as a “certified fund settlement business association” following scrutiny over a two-month review by the FSA yesterday.

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