The UK advertising watchdog is investigating marketing by “meme coin” Floki Inu on London’s trains and buses as the city’s government faces rising pressure to set tighter boundaries for crypto promotions on public transport.
The Advertising Standards Authority said it has opened a formal inquiry into whether the promotions for Floki Inu, a digital coin inspired by Elon Musk's dog, breached UK marketing standards.
The regulator's decision comes as several members of the London Assembly, which oversees the city's government, backed calls for either a ban on crypto advertising on public services or a review into how Transport for London scrutinises these marketing campaigns.
A spokesperson for London mayor Sadiq Khan, who chairs the TfL, said the government body that runs the city's Underground and bus network has requested input from both the ASA and the Financial Conduct Authority "for their views on the concerns being raised".
“Once TfL has that input they will consider what action might be necessary going forward,” they added.
Floki Inu’s marketing blitz appeared across the UK capital’s transport system last month with adverts displaying the slogan “Missed Doge? Get Floki” splashed across Underground stations and trains, as well as on buses. The campaign, one of several initiated by digital token operators on TfL services this year, highlights how crypto outfits are seeking to tap into the growing enthusiasm for trading digital assets.
Most cryptocurrencies’ adverts fall outside the scope of the UK’s specialised rules for advertising financial products that are overseen by the FCA, and are instead supervised by the ASA, an industry self-regulatory body.
The ASA said it was “investigating some aspects” of the Floki ads following a review, but declined to provide details “for fear of prejudicing the investigation”.
Floki Inu said its London ads complied with “all laws and regulations. The advertisements were approved by legal and by the governing agency implementing the advertisements.”
Extra review
TfL said all crypto adverts are already subject to extra review and required to carry disclaimers, and that the Floki ads were cleared by a copy advice service run by ASA sister organisation the Committee of Advertising Practice. The service allows advertisers “to check how their prospective non-broadcast ads measure up” against relevant marketing rules, according to the ASA.
Liberal Democrat and Green party members of the London Assembly said this week that TfL should not accept any more crypto ads at least until the UK government and FCA set out new guidance on cryptocurrency advertising. The Labour party, the assembly's largest group, urged TfL to more closely review the crypto ads.
Two Conservative members said TfL should continue its current approach. "It's tempting to ban stuff when you guess people may reach the wrong decision, but if you remove agency from adults you end up infantilising them," said assembly member Andrew Boff.
Floki Inu’s price has surged more than 5,000 per cent since the summer, according to Coinbase data. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2021