Legal
Bitcoin: Legal Risks For Asia-Based Investors And Advisors

A senior lawyer in Asia asks what sort of considerations investors should have in mind when buying bitcoin, including legal issues, as the digital field continues to grab headlines.
Bitcoin recently pushed above $58,000 per coin and the area
of digital assets continues to draw in heavy inflows. Some
commentators say the area is becoming more mainstream, raising
questions about what regular banks and major financial regulators
are going to do.
In this article, Calvin Koo of international law firm Kobre & Kim
talks about the investment case and risks from the viewpoint of
Asia-based clients and advisors. The editors are pleased to
share these views. Please jump into the conversation. The usual
editorial disclaimers apply. Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
and jackie.bennion@clearviewpublishing.com
Tesla’s 8 February announcement that it had bought $1.5 billion
in bitcoin is the latest in a recent series of mainstream
endorsements driving bitcoin’s price to new all-time highs, after
a 300 per cent price surge in 2020. Just over a week later,
bitcoin traded at $50,000 for the first time, with the total
market value rising to $940 billion.
For investors previously unsure about bitcoin, these developments
may shift their views from bitcoin being a scam or a curiosity at
best to now being a serious asset worth considering for their
portfolios.
An ultra-high net worth individual tracking this trend, whether
to hedge, diversify, or ride a wave of high returns, will rely on
family offices and other trusted advisors to make appropriate
financial decisions. But these investors and their advisors
should also seek knowledgeable counsel on legal exposure risks
associated with bitcoin, particularly since, for many, this is a
novel investment with new laws and regulations continuously
sprouting across the globe.
For example, in Asia-Pacific, governments in key UHNW
jurisdictions are regulating cryptocurrency trading platforms in
line with global anti-money laundering standards. Following
Singapore’s new regulation early last year, Korea announced its
new law which is taking effect this March. Hong Kong and Dubai’s
International Financial Centre also proposed new regulatory
regimes for 2021.
Although these laws may enhance UHNW individuals’ commercial
confidence in dealing with new service providers and
counterparties, there is potential downside legal risk. For
example, the know-your-client features of these laws ease the
ability of UHNW individuals’ adversaries to trace, and
potentially freeze, an individual’s bitcoin holdings. In
addition, UHNW individuals and their advisors should consider
whether asset protection strategies designed to mitigate those
risks inadvertently run afoul of any applicable AML, sanctions or
tax laws.
Below are three key risk areas UHNWIs must keep in mind:
1. Traceability
Many UHNW individuals rightly value their privacy and prefer
opaque asset holdings due to security reasons. Those who are new
to cryptocurrencies may harbour the common misconception that
bitcoin offers safe anonymity. But bitcoin is not completely
anonymous and, in many circumstances, is readily traceable. This
is because bitcoin uses blockchain technology. A fundamental
feature of that technology is that information recorded on the
blockchain is immutable. This means that literally every
transaction of bitcoin is recorded on publicly accessible
non-centralised ledgers. Consequently, motivated governments and
adverse individuals may be able to track and trace an
individual’s bitcoin holdings and transactions through forensic
analysis of public blockchain data.
Although use of pseudonyms to transact bitcoin offers some level
of privacy protection, sophisticated investigators can often
ascertain the true owner. For example, in jurisdictions where KYC
regulations require crypto-exchanges to hold customer
identification information, adversaries can potentially access
that information through traditional investigatory and legal
disclosure tools. Hong Kong, Korea and Singapore already impose
KYC requirements on certain crypto-exchanges in different
circumstances, with Hong Kong recently proposing an expansion of
those requirements. The DIFC and other sophisticated
jurisdictions committed to AML standards are likely to follow
this cross-border trend. Thus, UHNW individuals interested in
bitcoin should understand how KYC regulations designed to combat
unlawful activity may also collaterally impact their legitimate
privacy concerns.
2. Seizability
Armed with information about a UHNW individual’s bitcoin
holdings, opportunistic adversaries may target that UHNWI with
aggressive legal claims, allowing them to pursue injunctive court
orders to freeze bitcoin among other types of assets. Their goal
may be to ultimately seize the bitcoin or force other concessions
from the UHNW individual. Although the question of whether
bitcoin is property subject to traditional proprietary court
orders is still developing in many jurisdictions, the global
judicial trend is clear, including in Asia-Pacific. Courts in
Singapore and South Korea have already recognised bitcoin as
property. Moreover, Hong Kong and English case law (1) from the
last 16 months go further by effectively recognising that bitcoin
is a sizeable asset notwithstanding its intangible existence.
Consequently, UHNW individuals should not simply assume that
bitcoin is secure against seizure. Instead, UHNWIs and their
advisors must proactively consider appropriate asset protection
structures for holding bitcoin in a lawful manner that maximizes
security consistent with the investor’s overall goals. Given the
novelty of such investments, a “stress test” should be run
against proposed structures. In this way, experienced
investigations and asset recovery lawyers can probe these
structures as a government or civil adversary might, thereby
strengthening risk mitigation strategies.
3. Government enforcement exposure
Advisors tailoring these structures and strategies must also
consider how various laws in relevant jurisdictions, including
laws that may not explicitly refer to cryptocurrencies, may
nevertheless apply to acquiring, divesting or otherwise
transacting in bitcoin. Failure to account for these laws may
inadvertently expose the UHNW individual to adverse actions from
governmental authorities. For example, AML and sanctions laws
that various governments use to prohibit certain types of
transactions, or which create disclosure obligations, are likely
to still apply to transactions involving bitcoin. Therefore, a
careless approach to transacting in bitcoin without understanding
these laws may result in an UHNWI being made an example of by a
government authority set on aggressively establishing an
important new legal precedent.
UHNWIs should also understand if and how their bitcoin holdings
and transactions need to be reported to local tax authorities,
including what taxes must be paid on any gains and when. The
answer may not always be obvious, since many tax authorities are
still creating and clarifying such rules. Nevertheless, as
failure to disclose, or pay appropriate taxes, can open the door
to civil or criminal liability, UHNW individuals need to ensure
that their usual tax advisors are up to date on this developing
area of tax law.
For many UHNW individuals, investing in bitcoin is an exciting
new option. Naturally, they will look to their trusted advisors
for prudent financial advice. But for those new to
cryptocurrencies, it is important to also consider legal exposure
risks that come with bitcoin investments and transactions. This
is especially important given the rapidly changing legal and
regulatory environment surrounding cryptocurrencies. Experienced
and innovative private client lawyers working alongside a UHNW
individual’s longstanding trusted advisors can help close this
advice gap.
About the Author
Calvin Koo represents ultra-high net worth individuals
pursuing offensive and defensive strategies related to
cross-border government investigations and regulatory enforcement
actions. He also counsels financial technology clients regarding
cryptocurrency-related disputes and investigations, as well as
victims of fraud on international asset tracing and judgment
enforcement strategies. Koo has a global practice, with an
emphasis on matters having an Asia-Pacific and US nexus.
Footnotes:
1, In certain cases, English case law remains influential in many common law jurisdictions across Asia-Pacific, including Australia, Hong Kong, New Zealand and Singapore, for example.