The Japan Times wrote that the exchange's initial decision to list these coins had been one of several reasons that the FSA had not yet granted it official approval, signaling that the agency's
apprehensions around privacy coins date back to March, if not earlier.
Their primary
apprehension with UBI revolves
around the possibility that premiums might increase (47 per cent), although
privacy issues such as sharing of consumer data (46 per cent) and
apprehensions around using such data to invalidate claims (46 per cent) rank equally high, Towers Watson reports.