Understanding Initial Coin Offerings

Stellar.org published a white paper with Luxembourg House of Financial Technology (LHoFT) called Understanding Initial Coin Offerings: Technology, Benefits, Risks, and Regulations.

Companies have raised over $1.8 billion through ICOs (Initial Coin Offerings) since January 2017. As organizations continue to raise tens, sometimes hundreds, of millions of dollars in each token sale, it grows increasingly important for industry leaders, lawyers, policymakers, and academics to understand both the ICO regulatory landscape and the economic and technological attributes of the cryptocurrency and ICO space. Even companies that are not directly involved in the blockchain space should be conscious of how ICOs and tokenization could be leveraged in multiple industries.

The purpose of this paper is to educate industry leaders, lawyers, policymakers, academics, and the general public on the characteristics, use-cases, and regulatory concerns of ICOs.

Key Takeaways:

The Technical Elements of ICOs
The paper provides a walkthrough of the ICO lifecycle and highlights technical attributes such as choice of issuance platform, token sale models, hard and soft caps, mining, and token owner distribution.

The Benefits, and Risks of ICOs
* There are multiple categories of tokens, each of which features different economic characteristics and regulatory implications.
* ICOs galvanize open source project development, drive global financial inclusion, and reduce the costs of fundraising. The ICO model also generates built-in customer bases and positive network efforts for decentralized applications.
* However, ICOs may feature a variety of risks, including risks to consumers and investors, market risks, and regulatory compliance risks. The paper features a table of ICO best practices that may help to alleviate some of these risks.

Recommended and Forecasted Regulatory Actions
* There are multiple legal and regulatory risks to ICOs. Regulators should not be hasty in imposing stringent regulations and should consider policies that maximize flexibility as the blockchain and distributed ledger industry matures and develops.
* The authors propose the adoption of specific measures and approaches, such as regulatory sandboxes, self-regulatory organizations, and crossborder financial technology cooperation agreements, that would help policymakers achieve regulatory goals without undue impediment to innovation.
* Blockchain and distributed ledger organizations should create a open line of dialogue with policymakers to promote mutual education and understanding.

Global Regulatory Developments
The paper contains a survey of cryptocurrency treatment across the globe, including statements on ICOs from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Canadian Securities Administrators, Monetary Authority of Singapore, People’s Bank of China, Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission, South Korea Financial Supervisory Commission, the Israeli Securities Authority, and the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority.