Lynn Johannson, Advisor, Sustainability and ESG
January 4th, 2024
Bloomberg | By Natalie Wong | Sept 22, 2017
New guidance for issuing digital currencies in Canada may make them safer for investors but they’ve also prompted one company to shun its home country as it kicks off one of the largest initial coin offerings to date.
The experience of Impak Finance Inc., which launched Canada’s first ICO with regulatory blessing this year, and Kik Interactive Inc., which decided to exclude the country’s investors from its planned $125 million offering, underscores the difficulty for countries grappling with a $2 billion market that’s been a magnet for fraud while trying to nurture financial innovation.
See: Impak Finance ICO Planned For Launch Aug 21
Canadian regulators said in August that ICOs -- companies that raise funds by issuing their own cryptocurrency -- may be considered securities, requiring them to comply with a raft of rules, including ensuring the identity checks of their investors. At the same time, the Canadian Securities Administrators, which represent provincial regulators, have created a “sandbox” that provides firms relief from securities laws for a limited time under certain conditions, to test new ways of raising capital.
Impak, which launched its ICO in August, says going through regulators may have lost the company millions of dollars but it was worth it to ensure the legitimacy of its investors.
“What we don’t want is pump and dump speculators that buy the stock and sell as soon as it grows 40 percent to 50 percent,” Paul Allard, chief executive officer of the Montreal-based firm, said in a phone interview. Impak, which plans to invest in socially responsible companies, has raised C$1.4 million ($1.1 million) and will test it’s ICO for two years under conditions laid out by Quebec’s financial regulator.
China has banned ICOs, Hong Kong regulators are looking into ICOs to protect small investors and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is monitoring digital coin sales after warning in July that ICOs and cryptocurrency exchanges are subject to U.S. law. The CSA has also said it would consider whether an ICO is a security on a case by case basis.
See: China's ICO Ban: A Full Translation of Regulator Remarks
Impak’s regulatory success comes as Kik, backed by Tencent Holdings Ltd., decided to exclude Canadians from its ICO, citing "weak guidance" from the Ontario Securities Commission (OSC), the regulator for the country’s most populous province.
Waterloo, Ontario-based Kik said it had provided the OSC with information it thought it needed but didn’t have enough feedback from the regulator on whether it would be considered a security. Kik featured the "most stringent registration process of any token sale to date," Ashley Goldstein, a spokeswoman for Kik said in an email.
See: Kik Blames Canadian Regulators for Skipping Country in ICO
The National Crowdfunding Association of Canada (NCFA Canada) is a cross-Canada non-profit actively engaged with both investment and social crowdfunding, blockchain ICO, alternative finance, fintech, P2P and online investing stakeholders across the country. NCFA Canada provides education, research, leadership, support, and networking opportunities to over 1600+ members and works closely with industry, government, academia, community and eco-system partners and affiliates to create a vibrant and innovative online financing industry in Canada. Learn more About Us or visit ncfacanada.org.
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