The regulator has scheduled the official transition for October 25, 2027, bringing digital asset services under the broader financial services rulebook. Firms seeking to maintain operations must submit their applications between September 30, 2026, and February 28, 2027. This window applies to a wide range of entities, including trading platforms, custodians, staking services, and stablecoin issuers.
In a concession to industry feedback, the FCA lowered proposed capital requirements for stablecoin issuers to 1% of issued value, down from an initial 2% target. David Geale, the FCA’s executive director for payments and digital finance, acknowledged that the original proposal was viewed as overly burdensome. Despite these eased capital rules, issuers must still adhere to strict reserve and redemption standards. While most stablecoins fall under FCA oversight, tokens deemed systemic will face additional scrutiny from the Bank of England.
The framework also introduces mandatory market conduct standards, requiring firms to conduct annual stress tests and prove their ability to manage market volatility. Furthermore, the regulator is refining its approach to decentralized finance, signaling that services with identifiable operators or centralized control mechanisms will likely be brought under the same licensing requirements as traditional crypto intermediaries.

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