Crypto-asset identifiers – (DTIs) as underliers for UPIs

Historically, crypto-assets, as opposed to other financial instruments, have been more difficult to identify given their complexities and intricacies. To date, they been given general short-names. For example:

  • bitcoin is called BTC or XBT, and
  • Ethereum Ether referred to as Ξ, Ether or ETH


Non-uniformity of such names, has made the process of identifying such assets duplicative and inefficient.

What is a DTI?

The Digital Token Identifier (DTI) as defined in ISO 24165 standard (ISO DTI Standard), goes beyond the UPI and ISIN – as they are basically used to identify specific types of crypto assets or digital tokens. The ISO DTI Standard supports regulators and market participants by providing greater transparency, thus mitigating and reducing risk.

The scope of DTI use includes fungible assets using distributed ledger technology. DTIs can be assigned to security tokens, asset-backed tokens and cryptocurrencies/crypto-assets and is maintained and issued by the Digital Token Identifier Foundation (DTIF) (discussed below).

The DTI consists of 9 alphanumeric characters where the first 8 characters are the base number. The base number is 8 characters (randomly generated) excluding vowels and the letter ‘Y’ (noting, the first character can never be ‘zero’). The last character of the DTI is the check character. Once issued, the DTI cannot be amended or re-used and if a request for it to be withdrawn is made, it will be marked as deleted in the DTIF registry and not used again.

Background

To simplify the process of identifying crypto-assets, ANNA-DSB has adopted the identifiers issued by the DTIF which is a non-profit division of Etrading Software (ETS) and a global regulatory data provider. The DTIF has already issued ISO identification codes for more than two thousand commonly traded digital assets and add more codes each day.

Crypto-assets that fall within EMIR’s scope have been required to have a UPI since the commencement of EMIR Refit – 29 April 2024. To generate or retrieve a UPI for a crypto based OTC derivative requires selecting one of the Crypto DTIs as an underlier.

Other DTI uses

DTIF has recently announced that it aims to work together with ANNA-DSB to integrate DTIs and ISINs into reporting tools for reporting requirements under the European regulations, the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) Regulation and EMIR.

In July 2024, ESMA published its second final report and technical standards stating that the key crypto-asset identifier to be used for compliance with MICA will be the DTI.

Whilst ESMA was one of the first regulators to embed the ISO DTI Standard into its framework, the DTIF has also stated that they aim for the DTI to also be used across other G20 jurisdictions e.g. UK, Australian and Singapore towards the end of 2024 and Japan in 2025.

Examples of common DTIs

As at September 2024, DTIF has announced that the total number of DTIs given to crypto assets is 2,554. See below the DTIs for the most popular crypto assets (most of which are for native digital tokens) which we have extracted from a DTIF registry search:

Crypto-assetDTI TypeDTI
BitcoinNative Digital Token4H95J0R2X
Ripple XRPNative Digital TokenL6GTZC9G4
Ethereum EtherNative Digital TokenX9J9K872S
Binance CoinAuxiliary Digital Token[ ]
TetherAuxiliary Digital Token[DHPZJQ579]
BNBNative Digital TokenT4FV9055Q
USD CoinAuxiliary Digital Token[ ]
DogecoinNative Digital Token820B7G1NL
SolanaNative Digital Token20J63Z4N3

How can TRAction assist?

If you need assistance on more information on DTIs, UPIs and ISINs, and determining whether your crypto-trading is subject to any of the EU, UK, Australian and Singapore regulations, get in touch with us.

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