As per the Medium-Term Program for the years 2023 through 2025 by the Ministry of Treasury and Finance and the Presidential Strategy and Budget Directorate, the Crypto Assets Bill was submitted to the Turkish Grand National Assembly (the Turkish Parliament) on 16 May 2024 as the Bill on Amendments to the Capital Markets Law (the Bill).
Though several regulations are currently in force, the Bill is Türkiye’s most detailed regulation regarding crypto assets.
Regulations that Are Currently in Force
Regulation on the Prohibition of Using Crypto Assets in Payments
This regulation prohibited using crypto assets for payments. However, it limits the freedom of contract and is thus controversial in its conformity with the Constitution. It is also contentious regarding the applicability, as it does not consider the rule that a valid payment of a monetary debt requires payment in an official currency and ignores the current regulations regarding electronic money institutions.
Regulation Amending the Regulation on Measures to Prevent Laundering the Proceeds of Crime and Financing of Terrorism
With this regulation, crypto asset service providers had become one of the organizations responsible for implementing the Law on the Prevention of Laundering the Proceeds of Crime.
Tax Procedure Law General Communiqué
With this communiqué, crypto asset service providers had become obliged to submit the ultimate beneficial owner information declaration to the Revenue Administration.
Financial Crimes Investigation Board General Communiqué
With this communiqué, crypto asset service providers had become obliged to take measures to determine whether the customer or the ultimate beneficial owner was a person of public influence.
As can be seen, these regulations aim to prevent financial crimes and do not include general rules that regulate the crypto assets market.
The Bill’s Scope: Which Crypto Assets?
Crypto assets falling under the scope of the Bill are:
Highlights from the Bill
The Bill:
First Impressions
Although the Bill contains detailed regulations, considering the rules in force, it is not as comprehensive and clear-cut as the European Union’s Regulation on Markets in Crypto-Assets or the United States’ Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act.
Another critical issue is that the Bill leaves too much regulatory authority to the CMB, which may raise claims of unconstitutionality. Similarly, the rule authorizing the CMB to decide to block access to a crypto asset service provider’s website instead of a court order may lead to additional discussions of unconstitutionality.
Nevertheless, the Turkish Parliament can address the deficiencies during the discussions in the parliament, and the CMB can clarify the details with secondary regulations. However, to ensure legal predictability, the secondary regulations must be completed within six months from the entry into force of the Bill, as envisaged by the Bill, without any time extension.
Winners and Losers
Tech Savvies
Tech savvies who conduct peer-to-peer crypto asset transactions and do not use any crypto asset services for trading, transfer, or custody seem to neither win nor lose.
Investors Using Crypto Asset Exchanges
Investors seem to be among the winners, considering the scams in the crypto assets market. However, they must ensure they receive services from crypto asset exchanges with licenses from the CMB.
On the other hand, transaction fees that crypto asset exchanges charge investors will likely increase as crypto asset exchanges pass on regulatory compliance costs to customers.
Another development expected for investors following the Bill may be applying withholding tax, exchange tax, or similar taxes to crypto asset trading transactions carried out on crypto asset exchanges.
Domestic Crypto Asset Exchanges
Some domestic exchanges seem to be among the winners, and some seem to be among the losers.
The winners are the corporate exchanges that incorporate companies in Türkiye, have sufficient capital, and invest in the latest technologies. There are even those who design their systems like an investment firm from the very beginning.
The losers are those who operate with questionable shareholders and capital structures or, worse, those who operate entirely online without even incorporating a company.
Foreign Crypto Asset Exchanges
Foreign exchanges also seem to be among the losers. The Bill may be a negative development for them because some do not prefer to obtain any license, even in their own countries, and move to countries without license requirements.
We need to wait and see whether these exchanges will apply for a license in Türkiye, and if they do not, how the relevant institutions will enforce the administrative or criminal sanctions other than blocking access to their websites.
Those Who Hide Assets from Their Spouses, Reserved Heirs, or Creditors
These are definitely among the losers!
The Bill does not bring good news for those who hold crypto assets to hide their assets from the liquidation of the matrimonial property regime in a possible divorce case or from their reserved heirs (spouse, children, mother, or father) in case of death.
A similar outcome also applies to those who hold crypto assets to hide their assets from their creditors because, with the Bill, electronic seizure of the crypto assets becomes possible.
So, let’s see if the Bill will pass the Turkish Parliament as is, or will some amendments be made?
Av. Müge Önal Başer, LL.M., LL.B.
References