Crime involving cryptocurrencies hit an all-time high of $14 billion (€12.4 billion) last year, blockchain researcher Chainalysis said on Thursday, a record that comes as regulators call for more powers over the fast-growing sector.
Crypto received by digital wallet addresses linked to illicit activity including scams, darknet markets and ransomware jumped 80 per cent from a year earlier, Chainalysis said in a report.
However, the growth in legitimate trading far outstripped the growth in crime. The activity represented just 0.15 per cent of total crypto transaction volumes, its lowest ever.
Total transaction volume surged to $15.8 trillion (€13.9 trillion) last year, up more than 550% from 2020 levels.
“Crime is becoming a smaller and smaller part of the cryptocurrency ecosystem,” the report said.
Digital assets, from bitcoin to non-fungible tokens, exploded in popularity in 2021 amid an embrace from institutional investors and major companies.
Newcomers have been drawn to the promise of quick gains touted by crypto backers, as well as hopes that bitcoin offers a hedge against soaring inflation. Yet cryptocurrencies are still subject to patchy regulation, leaving investors with little recourse against crime.
Financial watchdogs and policymakers from Washington to Frankfurt have fretted over the use of crypto for money laundering, with some urging lawmakers to grant them greater powers over the industry.
"Criminal abuse of cryptocurrency creates huge impediments for continued adoption, heightens the likelihood of restrictions being imposed by governments, and worst of all victimises innocent people around the world," Chainalysis said.
Driving the increase in crime was an explosion of scams and theft at decentralised finance
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