Market makers provide liquidity to the crypto market primarily by continuously quoting prices—placing both buy and sell orders. But this seemingly simple activity actually involves a complex regulatory framework behind the scenes.
Most countries regulate market-making activities under the scope of "Virtual Asset Service Providers" (VASP) or "Crypto Asset Service Providers" (CASP). Once activities involve facilitating transactions for clients or acting as an agent for asset management, regulators will step in. This is not just a liquidity issue but also involves compliance costs, customer identity verification, anti-money laundering requirements, and a host of other considerations.
Therefore, the regulations governing market-making vary greatly across different countries and regions. Some places are lenient, while others are extremely strict. Practitioners need to understand the specific requirements of their operating jurisdiction to avoid pitfalls.
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GateUser-5854de8b
· 18h ago
It seems that market makers really face a tough road to global compliance. Basically, different countries have different approaches—some loosen regulations, others impose strict restrictions. You have to figure out the rules yourself.
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FlashLoanLarry
· 19h ago
nah the real opportunity cost is getting caught in the wrong jurisdiction... seen too many mm ops just casually bridge to sg or dubai thinking they're safe lol
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BlockchainTherapist
· 19h ago
Market makers are just workers, juggling between hands and still having to watch regulators' faces. These days are really tough.
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DefiOldTrickster
· 19h ago
Oh wow, it's the VASP system again. When I was new to the crypto world years ago, I didn't understand anything. Now it's even better—rules are more complicated than DeFi portfolio strategies. Now that's real arbitrage cost.
Market makers provide liquidity to the crypto market primarily by continuously quoting prices—placing both buy and sell orders. But this seemingly simple activity actually involves a complex regulatory framework behind the scenes.
Most countries regulate market-making activities under the scope of "Virtual Asset Service Providers" (VASP) or "Crypto Asset Service Providers" (CASP). Once activities involve facilitating transactions for clients or acting as an agent for asset management, regulators will step in. This is not just a liquidity issue but also involves compliance costs, customer identity verification, anti-money laundering requirements, and a host of other considerations.
Therefore, the regulations governing market-making vary greatly across different countries and regions. Some places are lenient, while others are extremely strict. Practitioners need to understand the specific requirements of their operating jurisdiction to avoid pitfalls.