Thursday, June 11, 2020

Lloyds Fined Million for nfairTreatment of Mortgage Customers

On Thursday, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) issued a fine of £64,046,800 to Lloyds Banking Group for failing to deliver fair treatment of mortgage customers.

The FCA said that Lloyds Bank, Bank of Scotland and The Mortgage Business (brands all owned by Lloyds Banking Group) did not obtain enough information to properly assess mortgage customers in payment difficulties or arrears, potentially delivering unfair treatment to more than a quarter of a million customers between 2011 and 2015.

Compounding the issue, cuts by the bank meant that most call handlers dealing with customers in mortgage arrears were new to their role and unable to consult more experienced staff.

Mark Steward, the FCA’s executive director of enforcement and market oversight, said in a statement: “Banks are required to treat customers fairly, even when those customers are in financial difficulties or are having trouble meeting their obligations.”

Customers should still pay what is owed, but banks are obliged to treat their customers fairly when making new payment arrangements,” he continued, adding that other firms should “take notice” of the FCA’s actions and ensure fair treatment of their own customers.

A Lloyds Group spokesperson said: “We have contacted all customers who were affected between 2011 and 2015 to apologise and have already reimbursed all who were charged fees at the time. Customers do not need to take any action.


https://www.lawyer-monthly.com/2020/06/lloyds-fined-94-million-for-unfair-treatment-of-mortgage-customers/

Tuesday, June 2, 2020

2020: The Year of EU Crypto-Asset Regulation?

Jérôme Herbet, Partner at Winston & Strawn, explores the history of EU rulings on crypto-assets and what these might portend for the future.

Fiat-backed ‘stablecoin’

In the midst of the global COVID-19 pandemic and world lockdown, the Libra Association published a new version of the white paper supporting its Libra crypto-currency. Initially founded and supported by Facebook, Inc., and then endorsed by a number of large companies (which since inception seem to have backed away from the project), the Geneva-based Libra Association is home of a new “stable coin,” i.e., a cryptocurrency designed to be backed by a reserve of hard currencies (fiat) in an effort to stabilise the price of the “coin” by linking its value to that of its reserve.

Although the Libra Association had asked the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) for an assessment on how the authority would classify the project (including the issuance of a “stable coin”) and guidelines were issued on 11 September 2019, other regulators and governments around the world voiced out a number of concerns about the project. The revised version of the Libra white paper contains a number of changes made to address such regulatory concerns.

Stable coins that include a reference to one or several existing legal currencies, such as Libra, pose specific issues, which were summarised in detail in the G7 Working Group report on stable coins published in October 2019 and resulted in a ban in the EU. On December 5, 2010, the EU Council and Commission jointly stated that no global “stablecoin” arrangement should begin operation in the European Union until the legal, regulatory and oversight challenges and risks have been adequately identified and addressed.

The revised version of the Libra white paper contains a number of changes made to address such regulatory concerns.

Until recently, the regulation of crypto-assets was primarily left to national initiatives, with States adopting diverging approaches. However, a fundamental distinction seemed to emerge between crypto currencies on the one hand and tokens on the other hand. As summarised by the EU Parliament in its April 2020 study on crypto-assets:

Cryptocurrencies (or coins), such as Bitcoin and Litecoin, are those crypto-assets that are designed or intended to perform the roles of currency, i.e.to function as a general-purpose medium of exchange, a store of value and a unit of account. They are intended to constitute a peer-to-peer alternative to government-issued legal tender. Tokens, on the other hand, are those crypto-assets that offer their holders certain economic and/or governance and/or utility/consumption rights. Broadly speaking, they are digital representations of interests, or rights to (access) certain assets, products or services. Tokens are typically issued on an existing platform or blockchain to raise capital for new entrepreneurial projects, or to fund start-ups or the development of new (technologically) innovative services.

In a number of jurisdictions around the world, the emergence of crypto-assets gave rise to specific legislative and regulatory responses aimed at addressing the most urgent issues raised by their development, albeit sometimes only partially given the difficulty to proceed with their legal qualification. In fact, all crypto-assets have different functionalities, and their inclusion within the existing regulatory framework requires a case-by-case analysis. This approach is clearly the one retained, for example, by the Swiss FINMA in its ICO guidelines published in February 2018 or the UK FSA, for whom “whether an ICO falls within the FCA’s regulatory boundaries or not can only be decided case by case. Many ICOs will fall outside the regulated space. However, depending on how they are structured, some ICOs may involve regulated investments and firms involved in an ICO may be conducting regulated activities”.

Most of the legislative and regulatory work so far thus focused on investor protection in the context of ICOs and, to a lesser extent, money-laundering issues. For example, in France, the PACTE (Action Plan for Business Growth and Transformation) law was adopted in April 2019 and established a legal framework for fundraising via the issuance of virtual tokens (ICOs) and digital asset service providers (“DASPs”). In the United States, the approach was rather to focus on substance over form with the consequence that US securities laws will be applicable for most ICOs. As stated by the SEC Chairman in a December 2017 statement, “replacing a traditional corporate interest recorded in a central ledger with an enterprise interest recorded through a blockchain entry on a distributed ledger may change the form of the transaction, but it does not change the substance”. Based on this approach, the SEC initiated several enforcement actions against ICO issuers that had failed to register their offering in accordance with US securities laws.

Public consultation

To address the more general issues raised by crypto-assets in the EU, on 19 December 2019, the European Commission launched a public consultation into a Directive/Regulation establishing a European framework for markets in crypto-assets.

The introduction to the consultation notes that crypto-assets have “the potential to bring significant benefits to both market participants and consumers” but also acknowledges the potential difficulties presented, including the challenge to financial stability that arises from the emergence of “stablecoins” as a new subset of crypto-assets.

The consultation builds on advice obtained from the European Banking Authority and the European Securities and Markets Authority on the applicability and suitability of the existing financial services regulatory framework to crypto-assets and will inform the Commission services’ ongoing work on crypto-assets. The consultation document notes that this includes a possible common regulatory approach at EU-level for crypto-assets that are not currently covered by EU legislation.

The consultation document is a working document and does not constitute a formal proposal by the European Commission. However, the consultation document provides a useful indication of the main areas of focus for the Commission and areas identified for potential regulatory reform:

  • Clarity (either by way of guidance, regulation, or a combination of the two) as to the classification of crypto-assets potentially distinguishing between “payment tokens”, “investment tokens”, “utility tokens”, and “hybrid tokens”;
  • A bespoke regime for crypto-assets not currently covered by EU financial services legislation, which may or may not include certain types of crypto-assets (such as utility tokens);
  • Greater regulatory requirements on crypto-asset service providers (issuers of crypto-assets, exchanges, trading platforms, wallet providers, etc.).
  • Requirements to ensure the proper identification of transacting parties in crypto-assets;
  • A widening of the AMLD definition of virtual currency, classification of obliged entities and conditions for regulation and licensing of providers;
  • Increased oversight and supervision of crypto-asset service providers; and
  • Amendments to existing legislation (including, inter alia, MiFID, the Market Abuse Regulation and Short Selling Regulation) to ensure appropriateness for security tokens and the use of distributed ledger technology.

The consultation document is a working document and does not constitute a formal proposal by the European Commission.

National implementation of amendments to the Anti-Money Laundering Directive

Concurrently, the implementation in the EU in the Anti-Money Laundering Directive (“AMLD”) contains a number of changes which will further impact crypto-asset professionals. The amendments to the previous iteration of the AMLD include:

  • A new definition of virtual currencies;
  • The inclusion of virtual currency providers and custodian wallet providers as obliged entities (which means that they will be subject to the requirements of the AMLD, including the need to apply customer due diligence measures and the need to report suspicious transactions); and
  • The requirement that exchange platforms and custodian wallet providers be registered.

The prospect of forthcoming changes to money laundering rules has caused a number of crypto firms to reconsider their operations. For example, crypto payments start-up Bottle Pay shut down its operations in December 2019, in anticipation of the entry into force of the revised version of the AMLD. Similarly, crypto mining pool Simplecoin and bitcoin gaming platform Chopcoin were reported to have closed their operations in December 2019, citing the new rules as the catalyst for closure.


https://www.lawyer-monthly.com/2020/06/2020-the-year-of-eu-crypto-asset-regulation/

Monday, May 4, 2020

When your home is a Japanese internet cafe, but the coronavirus pandemic forces you out

Odd jobs on construction sites used to earn Takahashi enough money to pay for a private booth each night at one of Tokyo's internet cafes. But Japan's coronavirus lockdown not only cost him his work, it has temporarily closed the cafe that was his de facto home.

http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/edition_world/~3/ZQtb849qIpo/index.html

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Spousal Support Law in Markham Holam Law PC 1-365-608-6161

Spousal support can be probably the most contentious issues in the separation. Who will be entitled to spousal support , of what quantum and for how long, are issues many spouses find difficult to grasp and understand upon a introduction to the relationship.

Is my Spouse Allowed Spousal Support ?

Whether a spouse is eligible for spousal support is usually a complex legal issue. entitlement will not be automatic quick grown timbers . spousal support guidelines . A spouse must demonstrate on an equilibrium of probabilities that he or she is eligible for receive spousal support with the other spouse. Once entitlement is established, only then do you evaluate the quantum, meaning the exact amount to become paid, and the duration, meaning the span of time it ought to be paid. With all these aspects to contemplate, many separating spouses find the issue of spousal support confusing and challenging.

Entitlement can either arise from the conditions of and roles adopted during a spousal relationship or at a common-law relationship. The determination of entitlement to spousal support is grounded in situations of the link and it is breakdown, and is particularly therefore fact-specific. No two cases are about the same. It really is this is why that obtaining advice from a legal professional to assess whether you and your spouse are entitled is so important. Only at Holam Law PC , we have the experience and expertise to assist you through this analysis and also to help resolve issues of spousal support.

Spousal Support Law in Markham Holam Law PC 1-365-608-6161

Spousal support is often just about the most contentious issues inside a separation. Who will be permitted spousal support , in what quantum and for how long, are issues many spouses find difficult to understand and understand upon a breakdown of the relationship.

Is my Spouse Entitled to Spousal Support ?

Whether a spouse is qualified for spousal support is really a complex legal issue. entitlement seriously isn't automatic rapidly spousal support guidelines . A spouse must demonstrate on an equilibrium of probabilities that he or she is entitled to receive spousal support through the other spouse. Once entitlement is made, only then would you think about the quantum, meaning just how much being paid, plus the duration, meaning the time it paid. With all these aspects to consider, many separating spouses find the issue of spousal support confusing and challenging.

Entitlement either can arise from circumstances of and roles adopted during a married relationship or from a common-law relationship. The determination of entitlement to spousal support is grounded in conditions of the link as well as its breakdown, and is particularly therefore fact-specific. No two cases are the same. It can be that is why that obtaining advice from a lawyer to gauge whether you and your spouse are entitled is really so important. Right here at Holam Law PC , we now have the action and expertise to assist you through this analysis as well as help resolve issues of spousal support.