India has exceeded the global adoption of cryptography for the second year in 2024, according to Chain-Analysy, a blockchain analysis company based in the United States, with 119 million investors, or almost a fifth of all crypto holders in the world. The United States ranked second with 53 million investors, followed by Indonesia with 39.
According to these estimates, the ranks could soon change. Last Friday, US President Donald Trump signed the law on engineering to create a regulatory regime for Stablecoins. American investors, unlike their Indian counterparts, will now have the comfort of a regulatory framework.
The new law of America requires stabbed – or cryptographic tokens whose value is set for a regular currency – to be supported by liquid assets such as US dollars and short -term cash bills.
This improves their credibility. Emitters must also disclose the composition of their reserves each month. Consequently, digital assets could become a routine means to make payments and transfer money. Stablecoins, mainly designed to maintain an ankle of 1: 1 to 1, are already in use.
Under the new law, the market could reach 2 dollars of dollars by 2028, as estimated by the Chartered Bank Standard. For comparison, the gold market is expected to reach $ 458 billion by 2032, according to Fortune Business Insights.
India, alas, has not yet regulated cryptocurrencies. Even if the rich and not so rich in India seem almost irresistibly cryptographic assets, despite the risks, we remain in a regulatory vacuum.
The government quickly taxed crypto gains, but was not so agile from the fog cleaning on digital assets or rules. Like the former finance secretary, SC Garg, argued in a Mint OPED, India’s approach in terms of crypto has been fragmentary, passive and systematically unsustainable.
A long -awaited discussion document on the subject has not yet been published. Meanwhile, investors in these digital assets seem to swell regularly.
According to reports, retail investors dominate crypto exchanges in India, which represents 90 to 95% of users, although they represent only 30 to 50% of negotiation volumes, while individuals and high-high institutions are lower (4-10%) but lead 50 to 70% of turnover with greater exchanges and their frequent use of derivatives.
The regulatory vacuum of India has seen several exchanges of crypto rushing to meet demand, but the safety of these platforms is a wild assumption. Take cyber attacks. Last week, Coindcx underwent a cyber-box of $ 44 million, this money would have been stolen by hackers in an internal account.
Although the exchange said that all investments are safe, the incident highlights the need to make this market both safer and more transparent. Last year, Wazirx had lost $ 234 million due to theft.
They are not small quantities and it is too late for a ban on cryptography. At least stablescoins need legal recognition (and rules). Of course, we could argue that UPI already softens payments and that the electronic roupine of the central bank can fulfill the functions of smart money from the crypto.
But investors voted with their wallets for private tokens. In this scenario, we need measures of the type taken by our capital market regulator, SEBI, to make the market for higher action derivatives for investors.
SEBI must now join the hands of the government and the central bank to fill the cryptographic vacuum cleaner before retail investors burn their fingers.
Garg proposed compulsory licenses, transparency, insistence on Indian jurisdiction and the functions of exchanges, brokers, aggregators, guards and other distant entities such as the four cornerstors of a cryptographic regulatory framework. It would be a good start.