In 2019, Singapore’s International Commercial Court claimed that BTC has “characteristics of intangible property” and crypto operations with it are legal (6).
The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) is the leading crypto regulator in this jurisdiction. Here (7), you can find a list of MAS-licensed entities. There are 17 pre-approved licenses and 180 applications for DPT licenses from MAS.
According to Coinfirm (8), Singapore is a popular jurisdiction for cryptocurrency exchanges to be based due to the low corporate tax rate (17% flat rate) and the crypto-centric progressive environment. Based on the total assumption of Coinfirm, there are 230 native blockchain organizations in the country.
MAS regulates functions according to the Payment Service Act 2019 (9). The act uses “digital payment token” and “digital payment token service.” The part of the act regulating electronic money exchange also applies to the digital payment token service.
In 2021, the PS ACT was updated and includes FATF recommendations for VASPs. A local official has published the Explanatory Brief for Payment Services (Amendment) Bill (10) about it. It’s published on the MAS website.
MAS gives standard or significant payment institution licenses for exchanges, wallets, and custodians. The type of the company in the license is “Digital payment token service,” and DPT services refer to the buying or selling of DPTs or facilitating the exchange of DPTs.
According to The Law Review (11) in 2021, “the definition of DPT services has been expanded to include the transfer of DPTs, the provision of custodian wallet services for DPTs and facilitating the exchange of DPTs without possession of moneys or DPTs by the DPT service provider.” Previously, it only regulated the exchange of DPT and its purchase.
You may see a summary of PS 2019 regulations made by Deloitte (12) in the image below.
MAS regulates digital securities and needs its approval - Capital Market Services license. You may see details about the CMS license (13) on the MAS site. The MAS also brought public offerings or issues of DPTs under the ambit of the Securities and Futures Act (SFA) in May 2020 (14), deeming approved tokens to be treated as capital market products for all purposes.
In 2023, Singapore banned (15) crypto lending and staking for retail customers.
According to the analysis of existing information on the MAS website and in the media, Singapore has a clear regulation framework and licensing procedures for:
-Exchanges (crypto to crypto and crypto to fiat)
-Wallet providers and custodian
-ICOs
-Security tokens
For crypto exchange and wallets, there are two types of licenses:
-Standard Payment Institution license for Digital payment token service
-Major Payment Institution license for Digital payment token service
It has a Capital Markets Service (CMS) license for token sales and crypto securities.
The regulator's position about licensing procedures is below.
You can find more information in the license guide from MAS (16)
In April 2024 MAS has introduced (31) amendments into Payment Service Act, which include more requirements for DPT providers (stablecoin issuers/intermediaries) and rules for crypto custodians: clients' funds should held separately from the main company on trust accounts.