Bitcoin

CoinShares-owned Komainu secures crypto custodian registration in UK

Komainu, a cryptocurrency custody firm co-created by crypto investment firm CoinShares, hardware wallet company Ledger and Japanese Nomura, has secured major regulatory approval in the United Kingdom.

The company announced on Oct. 6 that it has received approval from the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to register as a custodian wallet provider under the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds regulations 2017.

The crypto asset registration with the FCA allows Komainu to offer crypto custody services in the United Kingdom, including collateral management services through its Komainu Connect platform.

“The U.K. remains one of the most important hubs for financial technology and innovation that will spur the convergence of traditional and decentralized finance,” Komainu CEO Nicolas Bertrand said.

Related: CoinShares says US not lagging in crypto adoption and regulation

Komainu’s latest regulatory approval comes shortly after the company obtained a full operating license from Dubai’s Virtual Asset Regulatory Authority in August 2023. The crypto custody platform is also regulated by the Jersey Financial Services Commission, where it remains headquartered.

As previously reported, Komainu has been closely working with U.K. authorities in recent years. In early 2021, Komainu claimed that made an agreement with the local authorities to securely store digital assets seized during the investigatory process.

Magazine: Big Questions: Did the NSA create Bitcoin?

Articles You May Like

UK private sector employment shrinks at fastest pace since 2021
We’re buying the recent dips on 2 stocks in the most oversold market in over a year
Trump-backed deal to avert government shutdown fails in first House vote
Oklahoma County seeks to settle battle over bond-financed jail site
PFM adds former Philadelphia budget director