South Africa Crypto Draft Triggers 1M Rand Fine Warning From Valr CEO

Coinpedia

Industry leaders and financial experts have issued a sharp rebuke of the South African National Treasury’s Draft Capital Flow Management Regulations 2026, calling the proposal a regressive move that mirrors apartheid-era economic controls.

Key Takeaways:

  • National Treasury draft replaces 1961 rules with 2026 digital asset controls despite Sidley’s objections.
  • VALR CEO Ehsani warns of a 1 million rand fine as 1961-era logic threatens to drive crypto investment away.
  • A foundation may be formed in 2026 to challenge the Treasury’s lack of clarity on crypto surrender thresholds.

An Outdated Framework

A controversial proposal by the South African National Treasury to overhaul capital flow regulations has sparked a sharp backlash from financial industry leaders, who warn the move could criminalize routine digital asset ownership and trigger a mass exodus of tech investment.

In recent formal submissions, critics of the proposals — including Steven Sidley, a prominent financial commentator and professor of practice at the University of Johannesburg’s JBS, and Farzam Ehsani, CEO of VALR, South Africa’s largest cryptocurrency exchange — characterized the Draft Capital Flow Management Regulations 2026 as an alarming retreat from the country’s liberalization goals.

The draft serves as the first wholesale replacement of South Africa’s exchange control framework in more than 60 years. However, critics argue the architecture is fundamentally flawed, seeking to control decentralized technology using the same principles designed for the fixed-exchange-rate economy of 1961.

“The regulations treat crypto as a problem to be controlled rather than a technology to be responsibly integrated,” Sidley noted, pointing out that peer economies like Nigeria and Brazil have already moved away from such restrictive stances.

Ehsani echoed this sentiment, calling the document “alarming” and noting that it contradicts a decade of positive dialogue between the industry and the Intergovernmental Fintech Working Group. He pointed to the vision of late leaders like Nelson Mandela and Tito Mboweni, who both advocated for the eventual phasing out of exchange controls.

“Why do we insist on preserving these destructive policies at the cost of our economic growth?” Ehsani asked.

The most controversial provisions involve mandatory declarations and expanded enforcement powers. For instance, under Regulation 8, the state could mandate the “compulsory surrender” of crypto assets, forcing holders to sell their assets for South African rand at the market rate.

The VALR CEO warned that Regulation 4 grants enforcement officers widespread powers to search and seize assets. “This would presumably include searching your phone for crypto-related apps at all airports and points of exit,” he said.

As reported by Bitcoin.com News, contravening these regulations could result in a $60,480 (1 million rand) fine and up to five years’ imprisonment.

The Threshold Transparency Gap

A major procedural objection from many industry leaders is the lack of transparency regarding the “determined threshold.” The current draft does not specify the amounts that trigger these rules, instead deferring that decision to unilateral ministerial discretion.

Ehsani also raised concerns about the lack of “technology agnosticism” in the draft. He questioned the logic of the framework’s definitions: “If all crypto assets are considered foreign assets, what about South African rand stablecoins? Would these South African assets be categorized as foreign assets simply because they exist on a blockchain?”

The remarks by both Ehsani and Sidley highlight unprecedented powers granted to border officials that are virtually nonexistent in other Group of 20 nations. Industry experts suggest this could lead to international travel advisories, deterring tech entrepreneurs and “digital nomads” from entering the country.

Since its release, the draft has drawn opposition from cryptocurrency industry stakeholders and, reportedly, from influential figures linked to South Africa’s ruling party. There are also indications that some individuals intend to establish a foundation to formally challenge the regulations.

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