Key Takeaways:
Crypto oversight climbed the global policy agenda after Financial Action Task Force (FATF) ministers increased pressure on countries to close gaps in digital asset regulation. In a declaration issued on April 17, the intergovernmental standard setter linked stronger anti-money laundering enforcement to faster action on virtual assets. The message was clear: jurisdictions that lag on crypto rules will face greater scrutiny.
The declaration framed crypto within a broader push to modernize defenses against illicit finance. Ministers stated in the declaration:
“We support responsible innovation in finance.”
That language is notable because FATF did not portray blockchain-based finance as inherently risky. Instead, it said technology, including artificial intelligence, can strengthen supervision and compliance when backed by safeguards. The same section also supported work on emerging payment technologies and related risks, while urging quicker implementation of crypto standards across the FATF network.
Recommendation 15, titled “New Technologies,” remains FATF’s main global standard for virtual assets (VA) and virtual asset service providers (VASPs). The group revised the recommendation in 2018 and adopted its interpretive note in June 2019 to clarify how anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing rules apply to crypto activity. The framework requires countries to assess virtual asset risks, apply a risk-based approach, and ensure VASPs are licensed or registered. It also requires supervision by competent authorities, sanctions for non-compliance, customer due diligence, recordkeeping, suspicious transaction reporting, and international cooperation. The June 2019 interpretive note and related guidance also form the basis for the Travel Rule, which requires originator and beneficiary information to accompany covered transfers.
Stablecoins and offshore firms are drawing sharper attention as implementation gaps persist. FATF’s 2025 targeted update states Recommendation 15 remains the benchmark for global crypto compliance reviews and found that only 29% of 138 assessed jurisdictions were largely compliant with virtual asset requirements, while one jurisdiction was fully compliant. A March 3, 2026, report examines stablecoin misuse in peer-to-peer transfers through unhosted wallets and cites Chainalysis data showing stablecoins made up 84% of illicit virtual asset transaction volume in 2025. A March 11, 2026, report on offshore VASPs outlines methods for detecting, registering, supervising, and sanctioning firms that exploit weaker oversight.
Crypto drew its clearest warning in the ministerial text itself. Ministers stated in the declaration:
“Considering the inherently cross-border nature of virtual assets, we call for the rapid and effective implementation of the FATF Standards in the virtual assets sector across the global network, and through our peer-review process, will hold countries who fail to expeditiously implement the Standards to account.”
The broader takeaway is that FATF is not introducing a new crypto rulebook. It is pressing countries to enforce the existing one faster, more consistently, and with fewer cross-border loopholes.
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