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05-Feb-2018<br />

Lloyds Bank bans customers from buying bitcoi...<br />

Dotemirates.com<br />

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Lloyds Banking Group says bitcoin buying ban will apply to its eight million credit card<br />

customers. Lloyds Banking Group<br />

Lloyds Banking Group's customers have been forbidden from using their credit cards to<br />

purchase bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies.<br />

The FTSE 100-listed lender said the ban will be effective immediately from today (5<br />

February). It will apply only to its eight million credit card customers. Debit cards will be<br />

exempt from the restriction.<br />

The ban will apply to Lloyds Bank, Bank of Scotland, Halifax and MBNA customers.<br />

Bitcoin's popularity has surged of late but its price has fluctuated wildly. Last week alone the<br />

cryptocurrency saw 30% knocked off its value, registering its worst seven-day period since<br />

April 2013.<br />

Bitcoin ended the week at $8,291.87, way below the $19,000 it reached last November,<br />

although it remained comfortably above the $1,000 it was trading at this time 12 months<br />

ago.<br />

The sharp swings in the value of cryptocurrencies have sparked fears that buyers could be<br />

running up unsustainable debts with banks footing the bill should prices continue to fall.<br />

"We continually review our products and procedures and this is part of that," a Lloyds<br />

spokesperson said.<br />

Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in January, Prime Minister<br />

Theresa May warned that action against digital currencies might have to be taken.<br />

"In areas like cryptocurrencies, like bitcoin, we should be looking at these very seriously,"<br />

she said.<br />

"Precisely because of the way they are used, particularly by criminals."<br />

Her stance was echoed by police, who have previously warned that digital currencies offer<br />

criminals an alternative route to avoid traditional money-laundering checks and other<br />

regulations.<br />

Facebook recently announced plans to block any advertisement promoting cryptocurrency<br />

products and services as part of a worldwide crackdown.<br />

The Bundesbank, Germany's central bank, has called for global regulation on bitcoin, while<br />

France's finance minister has asked for tougher rules on cryptocurrencies and regulators in<br />

the US, Russia, India, South Korea and China have all spoken in favour of a tougher<br />

approach to the industry,

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