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EU Votes for AML Regulation: $1000 Limit on Anon Crypto Transfers

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Lawmakers on European Parliament’s Economics and Civil Liberties committees voted in favor of the anti-money laundering regulation. This will impose a $1,000 cap on unverified crypto wallets on Tuesday. The limit represents a part of the EU’s overhaul of its anti-money laundering (AML) regulations, which will also apply to decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), non-fungible token (NFT) platforms, and decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms.

French Lawmaker Says the Vote Doesn’t Prevent Crypto Transactions

European lawmakers have voted to impose a $1,000 cap on payments by anonymous crypto users, marking the bloc’s latest push in its revamp of money laundering laws. 99 lawmakers voted for imposing the limits, while eight voted against them.

Lawmaker Damien Carême, the lead negotiator of the revamp talks, previously said that the limits would not prohibit crypto payments because the $1,000 cap only applies to unregulated wallet providers and unverified wallets. The European Parliament’s Economics and Civil Liberties committees approved the plans following the vote.

“We are absolutely not preventing crypto transactions. It’s just when identification isn’t possible.”

– Damien Carême, a French lawmaker from the Green party said.

After several weeks of negotiations, the AML regulation will advance to a plenary vote in the Parliament. After that, it will allow inter-institutional negotiations between the Parliament, Council, and the European Commission to begin.

The vote comes several months after a leaked draft of the EU’s money laundering bill showed that the bloc was planning to ban crypto providers from listing privacy-enhancing cryptocurrencies such as monero, dash, and zcash. However, Carême said a ban on such coins was unnecessary given that they were already prohibited under the EU’s Markets in Crypto Assets regulation (MiCA).

EU’s AML Bill Also Has Implications for DAOs, NFTs, and DeFi Platforms

Apart from the limit on unverified crypto wallets, the EU’s AML regulation has several other implications for crypto. More specifically, the new AML rules will also cover DAOs, as well as NFT and DeFi platforms.

These companies will be required to comply with the AML rules as long as they remain “controlled directly or indirectly, including through smart contracts or voting protocols, by identifiable natural and legal persons,” according to the Block. Earlier this year, the EU considered easing regulatory requirements for smart contracts after policymakers agreed on a new text of the Data Act.

Unlike the MiCA, the AML regulation counts decentralized platforms as obliged entities to reduce the current regulatory gap in the region. According to Carême, decentralized platforms will be required to conduct due diligence and report questionable transactions to the authorities just like traditional financial institutions and real estate agents.

This article originally appeared on The Tokenist

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