The Financial Intelligence Unit’s (FIU-IND) move to put large over-the-counter (OTC) cryptocurrency trades under scrutiny marks a major regulatory shift for India’s digital asset landscape. By requiring exchanges to share trade data for any off-market transactions exceeding $10,000, the Ministry of Finance is actively targeting the preferred route of high-net-worth individuals and corporate “whales.”
Why the FIU is Zeroing In on Crypto OTC
While everyday retail trading happens transparently on an exchange’s public order book, institutional and high-volume trades often move through OTC desks to prevent massive price fluctuations. However, this off-market setup introduces three key vulnerabilities that have caught the attention of regulators:
1. The Private Wallet “Escape Hatch”
Unlike retail users whose assets stay locked in exchange-managed accounts, large OTC clients frequently negotiate immediate withdrawal privileges to their private, self-custodied hardware wallets.
The Accountability Gap: Once crypto leaves a centralized exchange and hits a private wallet, it effectively goes off the domestic grid. The owner can instantly transfer that capital globally, bypassing standard banking oversight entirely.
2. The Illusion of Corporate KYC
Retail accounts are easily tied to an individual’s PAN or Aadhaar. OTC players, however, are typically closely held private companies or shell entities. Verifying the actual flesh-and-blood Ultimate Beneficial Owners (UBOs) behind layers of corporate registration is exceptionally difficult. This complexity leaves the door open to “mule accounts” similar to those that plague traditional banking systems.
3. Volume and Volatility Protection
Because OTC desks take large orders directly onto their own balance sheets and negotiate custom, fixed prices, these massive capital movements happen silently without impacting public market prices. This allows large-scale capital flight or laundering attempts to stay completely insulated from market volatility.
What Happens Next?
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Retroactive Audits: Exchanges have been instructed to preserve full records of all OTC transactions dating back to January.
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Beyond Standard Alerts: While exchanges already submit routine Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs), the FIU will use this new raw data to proactively map out networks, cross-reference shell companies, and track down hidden beneficiaries.
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Higher Compliance Friction: Institutional crypto desks in India will now face bank-grade financial forensic audits, signaling that the era of private, bulk digital asset trading in the country is drawing to a close.
