(Reuters) - Britain's revenue collector is preparing to abort its plans to tax Bitcoin trading only days after the currency's leading exchange, Mt Gox, collapsed after losing almost $500 million of customer deposits to hackers, The Financial Times reported.
HM Revenue & Customs said in a meeting with UK traders that it would no longer levy 20 percent value-added tax (VAT) on bitcoin transactions and also said it would not tax margins either, according to the paper.
The British support for the currency comes days after Mt. Gox, once the world's largest bitcoin exchange, was sued by a customer in the United States seeking to recover money lost in the hacking attack.
Corporation tax and other taxes would still apply, according to the FT.
The market for bitcoins - a virtual currency created or "mined" through a process involving a network of computers that solve complex mathematical problems - is worth about $7 billion at current market rates.
The currency has been facing regulation issues worldwide, having already been banned by some countries.
No one from the UK Treasury was immediately available for comment.
(Reporting by Tasim Zahid in Bangalore; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)