Unconfirmed: hacked Japanese crypto exchange Coincheck has reportedly had its cryptocurrency exchange license approved by the country’s financial watchdog.
Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA) has purportedly approved a cryptocurrency exchange operating license for hacked crypto exchange Coincheck. English-language Asia-focused news publication Nikkei Asian Review reported the news Dec. 19.
According to Nikkei, an announcement from the financial watchog is reportedly due to be released by the end of the year. Notably, in private correspondence with Cointelegraph Japan, Coincheck’s PR emphasized “it is not [the exchange’s] official announcement and we haven’t confirmed the fact yet.”
As previously reported, the FSA has intensified its scrutiny of domestic crypto exchanges in the wake of the industry-record-breaking $532 million theft of NEM tokens from Coincheck’s wallets this January.
While a license has been mandatory for all crypto exchanges operating within Japan since the amendment of the country’s Payment Services Act back in April 2017, the FSA has continued to ratchet up requirements for applicants throughout 2018; some 160 applicants were reported to still be awaiting a decision on an operating license as of mid-October, and as many as 200 today, according to Nikkei.
Following the January hack, Coincheck received two business improvement orders from the FSA, with a particular focus on ameliorating its customer protection and anti-money-laundering (AML) measures. The exchange further decided to rehaul its shareholder composition and management, becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of Monex Group in mid-April.
Under the new stewardship of Monex, Nikkei reports the FSA has now purportedly judged that protection measures and other critical systems at the exchange have now been sufficiently improved to warrant a new license. Alongside these improvements, Coincheck revised which cryptocurrencies it will manage, and also reimbursed those customers affected by the hack.
In mid-November, Coincheck resumed NEM trading, and opened support for Ethereum (ETH) and Lisk (LSK). It also joined the Japan Security Association in a bid “to renovate its image.”
Source: , CoinTelegraph

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