Blockchain Payments – October/November 2022

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•  Regulation Is 

Easier Said  

Than Done  
P. 04

•  EU Takes The 

Lead, With 

U.S. Following 

Closely  
P. 14

•  Ethereum’s 

Proof-Of-Stake 

Gambit  
P. 28

•  Biden Talks 

Cryptocurrency 

For The First 

Time  
P. 30

October/November 2022

Blockchain Payments Tracker® Series

Is Regulation Friend  

Or Foe For Blockchain?

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What’s Inside

04  Regulation Is Easier Said Than Done 

Cryptocurrencies are exploding in popularity, and regula-
tors around the world are struggling to craft regulations 
that limit their risks but unlock their benefits.

10   New Blockchain Regulations Around The World 

The UAE, U.K. and U.S. are just some of the countries that 
are scrambling to regulate the burgeoning blockchain scene.

14   The EU Takes The Lead, With The U.S.  

Following Closely 
New regulatory and legislative actions on both sides of the 
Atlantic are kicking regulation into high gear.

22   Businesses View Regulatory Uncertainty  

With Concern 
Fifty-two percent of cryptocurrency exchanges and block-
chain companies worry that the lack of legal certainty 
could harm their industry.

24   Navigating Blockchain’s Complex Regulatory 

Landscape
Andreas Veneris, professor of electrical and computer 
engineering at the University of Toronto, breaks down the 
fractured state of the current blockchain regulation scene.

28   Ethereum’s Proof-Of-Stake Gambit 

Ethereum’s move from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake 
could cut carbon emissions by more than 99%.

30   Biden Takes Blockchain Action 

The White House issues its first-ever cryptocurrency order, 
but more guidance may be released in the months to come.

32   About

Information on PYMNTS

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Need To Know

Regulation Is Easier 

Said Than Done

Energusage of most popular 
cryptocurrencies, as of August 2022

The blockchain market is expected to grow by $4.02 billion 
by 2026, according to a recent study, but the industry’s rapid 
growth has also brought some risks that put regulators on 
alert. Price volatility associated with cryptocurrencies was 
a concern, for example, as regulators believe some inves-
tors may not be fully aware of the risks they take. Bitcoin 
topped out at more than $19,000 per coin in 2017, sky-
rocketed to more than $65,000 last year, then plummeted 
right back down to its current value of approximately 
$20,000. Regulators are also concerned about fraud, with 
the Federal Trade Commission seeing $575 million in cryp-
tocurrency losses reported last year.

Experts and policymakers have also raised concerns about 
the environmental impact of cryptocurrency. Until recently, 
a single Ethereum transaction used more energy than the 
average household consumed in a week, thanks to its proof-
of-work (PoW) verification. The company claims to have 
reduced this power consumption to that of boiling a house-
hold kettle with its recent switch to proof-of-stake (PoS).

120B-240B 

 kilowatt-hours per year 

 

Total electricity usage of global crypto-assets

60%-77% 

Bitcoin’s share of crypto-asset energy usage

20%-39%  

Ethereum’s share of crypto-asset energy 
usage, pre-PoS

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$130M

2020

$680M

2021

$329M

Q1 2022

Need To Know

Reported cryptocurrency losses, by year

Well-crafted regulation could 

unlock the blockchain’s full 

potential.

The blockchain has enormous capability to improve 
cybersecurity, financial inclusion, cross-border pay-
ments and a host of other functionalities, but its 
current free-for-all status is holding it back. The big-
gest drawback to the status quo is not necessarily 
regulation or lack thereof but rather the uncertainty of 
regulatory status, with 55% of leading cryptocurrency 
companies  saying that regulatory ambiguity hinders 
blockchain adoption.

Government regulation could potentially curb these 
drawbacks and improve the blockchain for both corpo-
rates and individual investors. Another 60% of leading 
blockchain companies say that regulatory clarity could 
have the most significant positive impact on institu-
tional cryptocurrency adoption. This relatively new 
industry will require a gentle hand, however, as over-
bearing or misguided regulations could irreparably 
damage the industry and snuff it out before it reaches 
its full potential.

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Need To Know

Countries around the world 

are attempting to solve the 

regulatory puzzle.

The White House, for example, is calling for legislation that would 
develop comprehensive standards for the cryptocurrency industry’s 
environmental issues. Other pieces of legislation require cryptocur-
rency exchanges to comply with the same anti-money laundering 
(AML) protocols that currently apply to banks, placing verification 
requirements on an industry that was once largely self-regulating.

The European Union recently enacted legislation allowing cryptocur-
rency wallet providers to market themselves across the continent 
so long as they meet certain AML and stability requirements. The 
European cryptocurrency industry has so far been welcoming of 
these regulations, despite questions about their applicability to 
non-fungible tokens (NFTs). This law should go into effect one year 
to 18 months after next spring.

A sampling of blockchain regulatory 

legislation and its status, by country

Economic Crime 

and Corporate 

Transparency Bill

Introduced in House of 

Commons, September 2022

Markets in  

Crypto-Assets 

regulation

Passed, October 2022

Lummis-Gillibrand 

Responsible Financial 

Innovation Act

Introduced in Senate  

committee, June 2022

European Union

United Kingdom

United States

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News And Trends

New Blockchain 

Regulations Around 

The World
Employees of the U.S. government are typically sub-
ject to strict ethics rules to ensure they are not 
unfairly profiting from their positions, and the U.S. 
Office of Government Ethics (OGE) just updated 
these regulations to account for NFTs. The new 
guidance says that government employees must file 
financial disclosures if they own an NFT worth more 
than $1,000 or if the asset produces more than $200 
in income during the reporting period.

This guidance applies only to NFTs purchased for 
investment purposes rather than for personal or 
household use. The OGE issued a seven-part test to 
determine if a given employee’s NFT falls into these 
categories, including questions as to whether the 
employee purchased the NFT for its potential value 
or aesthetic reasons.

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News And Trends

Portion of IT experts 

whose top concerns were 

energy consumption and 

environmental impact

Portion of IT experts 
whose top concerns were 
money laundering and 
wallet security

UAE cracks down on 

cryptocurrency money 

laundering
Bad actors sometimes use cryptocurrency in scams and illicit 
purchases, with the real estate field emerging as a new favor-
ite for cryptocurrency scammers. The United Arab Emirates 
recently announced new regulations to curb cryptocurrency 
real estate fraud and money laundering, requiring real estate 
agents to alert authorities of any property purchased using 
cryptocurrency.

The new rules will also attempt to curb other forms of real 
estate fraud by requiring government notification of any real 
estate cash purchase of more than AED 55,000 ($15,000 USD). 
These new regulations leave “little or no room for manipu-
lation or illegal practices that could negatively impact the 
work environment and the economy and investment,” said 
UAE Minister for Economics Abdulla bin Touq Al Marri.

Experts skeptical of  

U.K. government’s 

cryptocurrency plans

The U.K.’s recent Chancellor of the Exchequer, Nadhim Zahawi, 
introduced a new bill that regulates the cryptocurrency sec-
tor and will allow firms to test new blockchain technologies 
in a sandbox environment. Cryptocurrency experts are skepti-
cal of the U.K.’s move to enter the blockchain field, considering 
the currently plummeting values of cryptocurrencies, NFTs and 
other blockchain-related products. Experts raised several con-
cerns, including environmental issues and the safety of crypto 
wallets and exchanges.

23%

15%

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PYMNTS Intelligence

The EU Takes The 

Regulatory Lead, 

With The U.S. 

Following Closely
Blockchain is drawing government scrutiny worldwide as 
regulators seek to constrain fraudsters, limit its environ-
mental impact and protect investors and enthusiasts from 
the technology’s potential drawbacks. The EU and the 
U.S. are currently taking the lead in blockchain regulation, 
although other countries, such as China, have taken the 
simpler step of banning it entirely.

This relatively new technology will require a careful hand 
when it comes to regulation, however. Overly onerous 
restrictions could constrain its potential economic ben-
efits, while a laissez-faire approach could enable fraud, 
money laundering and worse. This month, PYMNTS exam-
ines how the U.S. and the EU are threading this needle in 
their current and developing blockchain regulations.

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PYMNTS Intelligence

21%  

Share of Americans who have used or 
invested in cryptocurrency

19%  

Share of Americans who view 
cryptocurrency in a positive light

A rapidly growing number of Americans 
have 
invested in cryptocurrency, 
but many more are suspicious of 
its potential, resulting in calls for 
government regulation.

U.S. executive action 

is kicking blockchain 

regulation into high gear.

Until now, cryptocurrency supervision was primarily based  on 
the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC’s) interpretation 
and enforcement of the Securities Act of 1933, the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act and 
Investment Advisers Act of 1940. In most cases, cryptocurrencies 
have been considered securities, and cryptocurrency exchanges 
and issuers are required to register and disclose market activities 
to federal regulators in the same manner as other investments 
under the SEC’s oversight.

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PYMNTS Intelligence

The Biden administration is looking into further cryptocurrency 
regulation, but the most pressing question is the clarification 
of whether cryptocurrencies should be defined as securities 
or commodities. Classifying them as securities would continue 
their current jurisdiction under the SEC, but a new congres-
sional bill would change their classification to commodities, 
placing crypto under the control of the Commodity Futures 
Trading Commission (CFTC) instead. Both the SEC and the CFTC 
heads acknowledged, however, that not all cryptocurrencies are 
equal, and a case-by-case analysis may be needed.

Placing cryptocurrency oversight under CFTC control would be 
a game-changer, as industry players see the agency as a more 
crypto-friendly regulator than the SEC and more willing to issue 
new regulations. Still, if the CFTC were to obtain new powers 
to regulate crypto, it would likely assess new fees on crypto 
industry players to pay for the enforcement of new regulations, 
as the agency is much smaller than the SEC.

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PYMNTS Intelligence

17%  

Percentage of Europeans who own 
cryptocurrency

40%  

Share of European cryptocurrency 
owners who first invested last year

Europe lags behind much of the world 
in crypto adoption.

The EU is focusing on the 

blockchain’s environmental 

concerns.

The European Parliament Committee on Economic and Monetary 
Affairs recently endorsed the Markets in Crypto-Assets regula-
tion, which requires crypto-asset service providers to disclose 
their total energy consumption. While it does not specifically 
mandate that cryptocurrency companies reduce their car-
bon footprints, the hope is that these providers will voluntarily 
become more energy-efficient under public pressure.

This energy-focused regulation follows initiatives in other parts 
of the world to limit cryptocurrency mining due to environmental 
concerns. China, for example, banned cryptocurrency transac-
tions entirely, and the state of New York passed a cryptocurrency 
mining moratorium and began a study on the damage of PoW 
mining. Some cryptocurrencies, such as Ethereum, are already 
shifting to a PoS technique to reduce these damages.

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Chart Of The Month

Top Blockchain Adoption Risks  
Among Merchants

Source: PYMNTS

Cryptocurrency, Blockchain And Cross-Border Payments:  

Selecting A Blockchain Technology Partner, February 2022 

N = 250: Multinational financial institutions, fielded April 2021

Regulatory 

Uncertainty Is 

Top Concern 

For Blockchain 

Adoption

Businesses have enormous risks to contend with 
when entering the blockchain realm, and regula-
tion  tops the list. Fifty-two percent of firms cited 
regulatory concerns as their top risk, followed by 
uncertainty about operational efficiency at 41%, data 
quality at 37% and data security at 35%. Despite 
these concerns, businesses are still exploring ways 
to leverage the blockchain to make their processes 
more efficient.

52%

Regulatory concerns

37%

Data quality

41%

Uncertainty about 

operational efficiency

35%

Data security

34%

Profits

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[Blockchain regulation 

until now] has been like 

closing your eyes and 

throwing a dart at the 

wall. It is a field that has 

been very puzzling to a lot 

of people because there 

are so many different new 

entities — and so many 

unknown entities.

ANDREAS VENERIS 

Professor of electrical and 

computer engineering

Insider POV

Navigating 

Blockchain’s Complex 

Regulatory Landscape

Andreas Veneris, professor of electrical and computer engineering at 
the University of Toronto, tells PYMNTS why cross-border payments 
would be a good start for blockchain regulation.

Legislators have been toying with the idea of regulat-
ing the blockchain field for several years, but they only 
recently started passing legislation in earnest. 
This inter-
est is long overdue, said Veneris, spurred by the collapse 
of the stablecoin TerraUSD this past May. This fall cost 
investors tens of billions of dollars despite its pegging to 
the U.S. dollar, casting intense doubt on the viability of 
stable cryptocurrencies.

“The collapse of TerraUSD brought up the need for stron-
ger, more thorough and more detailed regulation to protect 
the public from scams and fishy cryptocurrencies.”

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There are 18,142 
cryptocurrencies in circulation.

There are 460 cryptocurrency 
exchanges around the world.

The market cap for 
cryptocurrency is $1.7 trillion.

 Until now, blockchain and 

cryptocurrency have been 

largely unregulated, despite 

their increasing market size.

Insider POV

These regulatory efforts remain quite slapdash, however, as law-
makers are still trying to understand this complex technology and 
craft appropriate legislation.
 Governments commonly perceive cryp-
tocurrency as a payment for dubious purposes and not as its own 
complex economy on par with traditional financial systems.

“The regulatory environment is still a mess, but in fairness, it’s still 
a very new medium. But the genie’s out of the bottle right now, and 
they cannot stop the ride. It’s like BitTorrent 20 years ago: The music 
industry tried to scare people into not downloading songs, but that 
didn’t work out at all.”

The best way forward for blockchain regulations is to focus on 
cross-border payments, said Veneris. 
These already rely on inter-
national cooperation and avoid the central problem of per-country 
regulation: Different countries will likely never totally agree on the 
best way to regulate the blockchain, and cryptocurrency exchanges 
can easily flock to the country with the loosest laws and continue to 
sell all around the world.

“For the purposes of advancing interoperability, it might be neces-
sary for regulators to have some provisions that are similar. If they 
are not similar, there will be a lot of opportunities for regulatory arbi-
trage, where one country’s regulations are not in line with another 
country’s regulations. People might want to take advantage of other 
jurisdictions with relaxed regulatory provisions.”

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Ethereum’s much-hyped shift from PoW to PoS is finally here 
after seven years of planning. Ethereum’s developers made this 
move in an attempt to alleviate environmental and energy usage 
concerns, with some experts estimating that the blockchain’s 
power consumption could drop by more than 99.9%. This is 
because the new PoS underlies a consensus mechanism that 
requires far less energy than what the PoW computations need. 
Gas fees will remain unaffected, however, as the total network 
capacity will remain largely the same. Ethereum is not the only 
blockchain working to reduce energy consumption. Algorand’s 
blockchain, for example, was designed as a greener alternative 
and carbon-neutral, as its protocol requires the energy con-
sumption of 10 average U.S. households.

Companies To Watch

Ethereum’s  

Proof-Of-Stake 

Gambit

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What’s Next

White House 

Releases First-Ever 

Cryptocurrency 

Framework

Cryptocurrency regulation in the U.S. has largely been 
left to financial regulators, but it is quickly gaining 
interest from higher up in the chain of command. The 
White House recently issued its first-ever framework 
on future cryptocurrency regulation, with a special 
emphasis on borderless transactions and cracking 
down on digital asset fraud. The U.S.’s next steps 
are a risk guidance assessment from the Treasury 
Department and an exploration of a new digital cur-
rency that the Federal Reserve would issue.

 JANET  YELLEN 

United States secretary 

of the treasury

Innovation is one of the hallmarks 

of a vibrant financial system and 

economy. But as we’ve painfully 

learned from history, innovation 

without adequate regulation can 

result in significant disruptions 

and harm to the financial systems 

and individuals.

Source: The White House. Background Press Call by Senior 
Administration Officials on the First-Ever Comprehensive Framework 
for Responsible Development of Digital Assets. 2022. https://
www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/press-briefings/2022/09/16/
background-press-call-by-senior-administration-officials-on-the-
first-ever-comprehensive-framework-for-responsible-development-of-
digital-assets/
. Accessed October 2022.

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Disclaimer

 32

PYMNTS is where the best minds and the best content meet 
on the web to learn about “What’s Next” in payments and 
commerce. Our interactive platform is reinventing the way 
in which companies in payments share relevant information 
about the initiatives that shape the future of this dynamic 
sector and make news. Our data and analytics team includes 
economists, data scientists and industry analysts who work 
with companies to measure and quantify the innovation that 
is at the cutting edge of this new world.

We are interested in your feedback on this report. If you have ques-
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