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British lender Lloyds Banking Group is the latest bank to put a bitcoin ban in place, following<br />

in the footsteps of US banking giants JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, and Citigroup last<br />

week.<br />

Lloyds Banking Group — which runs the brands Lloyds Bank, Bank of Scotland, Halifax and<br />

MBNA — is thought to be the first bank in the UK to ban credit card customers from<br />

borrowing to buy the digital currency.<br />

Timeline for Crypto<br />

The bitcoin buying ban applies only to credit card customers, those using debit cards will still<br />

be able to buy the cryptocurrency.<br />

The bank is concerned that people could run up huge losses borrowing to buy bitcoin which<br />

last year surged to almost $20,000 per bitcoin before falling back to under $10,000. Bitcoin<br />

is trading around $8,000 per coin this morning .<br />

Source: bitcoinity.org<br />

Other cryptocurrencies have also fallen in the last few weeks after increasing many times in<br />

price last year, some far more than bitcoin.<br />

What the bank said:<br />

A Lloyds spokeswoman said:<br />

Across Lloyds Bank, Bank of Scotland, Halifax and MBNA, we do not accept credit card<br />

transactions involving the purchase of cryptocurrencies. We continually review our products<br />

and procedures and this is part of that.<br />

Why it matters:<br />

It’s expected that Lloyds is the first of many banks to move to ban bitcoin buying, with the<br />

Telegraph <strong>news</strong>paper quoting banking experts who have predicted other financial<br />

institutions will quickly follow suit.<br />

Governments and regulators are under increasing pressure to rein in bitcoin, both due to its<br />

soaring value and its attraction to criminals who use it to buy illegal goods online. Bitcoin’s<br />

relative anonymity has led to it becoming a common way for people to buy things on the socalled<br />

dark web.<br />

3 Things That Will Change the World Today Get the Verdict morning email<br />

British prime minister Theresa May recently said that action against digital currencies may<br />

be required “precisely because of the way they are used, particularly by criminals”.<br />

She told Bloomberg:<br />

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

While most cyptocurrencies already abide by so-called Know Your Customer financial<br />

responsibility regulations the UK’s Treasury said late last year it wanted update regulation to<br />

bring virtual currency platforms into anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing<br />

regulation.<br />

Background:<br />

Other financial services companies and tech giants have cracked down on bitcoin and<br />

cryptocurrencies in recent weeks.<br />

On Friday last week JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, and Citigroup said they are no<br />

longer allowing customers to buy cryptocurrencies using credit cards.<br />

A JP Morgan Chase spokesperson said in a statement :<br />

At this time, we are not processing cryptocurrency purchases using credit cards, due to the<br />

volatility and risk involved,” “We will review the issue as the market evolves.<br />

The banks join credit companies Capital One Financial and Discover Financial Services in<br />

banning bitcoin purchases, with Discover first enacting the ban in 2015.<br />

Earlier this month, US billionaire Warren Buffett said he wasn’t interested in<br />

cryptocurrencies, warning that the bitcoin boom will “come to a bad ending”.<br />

Meanwhile, social media titan Facebook recently announced it would block any advertising<br />

that promotes cryptocurrency products and services.

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