Facebook confident Libra will win enough financial backers

Facebook, whose digital currency project Libra has been abandoned by several high-profile partners including PayPal, Visa and Mastercard, still expects to get 100 banks and financial firms on board once it addresses regulatory concerns, the head of the project said on Wednesday, Reuters reports.
“It will take time for us to address all of the regulatory concerns that were raised and it’s our duty and our responsibility to come with answers to all of these questions,” David Marcus was quoted as telling a panel at an International Monetary Fund (IMF) conference in Washington.
“I think once we’ve done this then I think we’ll see more banks and traditional financial services firms join the effort,” Marcus said, admitting that it may be harder for large, regulated financial firms to “take an active part in this fight right now, given the climate and the pressure.”
Facebook’s ambitious efforts to establish a global digital currency have suffered severe setbacks in recent days. Besides PayPal, Visa and Mastercard, other key members to pull out included names such as Stripe, eBay and Booking Holdings.
The exodus followed intense skepticism from global policymakers and regulators in the US and Europe who worry Libra could upend the global financial system, threaten users’ privacy and facilitate money laundering, Reuters noted
Federal Reserve governor Lael Brainard reiterated those concerns on Wednesday, saying at a separate event in Washington that the Libra project “must address a core set of legal and regulatory challenges” before it can go live.
Facebook is left without the backing of any major payments firms for the project, due to launch by June 2020.
Speaking at the IMF event, Marcus said around 1,600 entities globally had initially expressed an interest in joining the project and that Libra should have “no problem” reaching its goal of launching with 100 members.
On Monday, the Libra Association’s 21 remaining members forged ahead, holding their inaugural meeting in Geneva and selecting a five-member board.
Marcus said it is now in Libra’s hands to run a process to select more members.
He added that Libra needs time to build up its staff to address the regulatory issues, rather than Facebook “carrying that flag.”
– Contact us at [email protected]
RC
-
Epidemic and 40-year-high inflation stalk HK migrants in UK Mark O'Neill
The website of the Trinity Church in Sutton, southwest London, is written in English and traditional Chinese – 歡迎香港人, Welcome Hong Kong people. “The middle of a pandemic is not an easy time to arrive
-
The privilege of shorter quarantine Ben Kwok
The nightmare of staying in a hotel for three full weeks might hopefully be over. Yesterday the National Health Commission announced to shorten the hotel quarantine period for people arriving in the
-
3D maps enhance disaster prevention and rescue Dr. Winnie Tang
Abnormal and even extreme weather has become more frequent. The Observatory forecasts that tropical cyclone incidence and total rainfall this year will be "normal to high". To be well-prepared, the
-
Ignoble ease Neville Sarony
There is no shortage of commentators, both lawyers and lay people, who feel entitled to criticize Hong Kong’s legal community for what these observers assert is a failure to stand up for the liberal
-
An imminent private housing supply chasm and its solutions Ryan Ip Man-ki, Jason Leung Yeuk Ho
As the 5th wave of Covid-19 gradually subsides, waves of new private housing projects are now under the spotlight. Intensifying competition among developers became the talk of the town after a