Quantcast
Channel: CodeSection,代码区,网络安全 - CodeSec
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 12749

Security token offerings are illegal in Beijing, finance watchdog says

$
0
0

China hasremained vigilant toward the fledgling blockchain and cryptocurrency industry for a while and things might be about to get even worse. Beijing has declared security token offerings (STOs) illegal.

At a wealth management forum held over the weekend, Huo Xuewen, chief of Beijing’s Municipal Bureau of Finance, said that raising funds in STOs is practically “illegal,” local outlet Caijing reports ( via CoinDesk) .

“The ICO (initial coin offering) model is getting left behind for a new concept called STO. I want to issue a warning to anyone considering running an STO in Beijing,” Xuewen said. “Don’t do it in Beijing it is illegal. You can only engage in such activities with the approval from the government.”

For those unfamiliar: unlike anICOwhere a company raises funds by selling tokens to the public, an STO gives holders the ability to share the profits of a company through dividends.

Blockchain startups leaving ICOs for STOs

Now that the ICO mania isgradually dying out, blockchain startups are seeking new ways to secure funding; and it seems the STO is cropping up as the solution.

Over the past several months, tons of blockchain companies including some that already raised funds in ICOs are planning their own STOs. The move towards STOs does grant more rights to holders, but it is concerning that a year after raising billions of dollars in ICOs, companies are now seeking even more funding.

Indeed, mainstream crowdfunding platforms like Indiegogo are also getting in on the STO action (though their offerings might not always be open to everyone ). Hopefully, it goes better than theirbotched foray into ICOs.

Published December 3, 2018 ― 11:39 UTC


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 12749

Trending Articles