What to know:
- FCA finalized a crypto framework introducing stablecoin standards and market safeguards.
- Trading platforms must publish disclosure documents before listing eligible cryptoassets.
- Authorization applications open in September 2026, and the mandatory regime begins in October 2027.
The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority has finalized its crypto regulatory framework, introducing new operating standards for trading platforms, stablecoin issuers, custodians, lenders, staking providers, and other regulated crypto businesses. The package also establishes an authorization timeline that firms must follow before the regime becomes mandatory on Oct. 25, 2027.
The finalized framework creates a common regulatory structure across regulated cryptoasset activities. Besides strengthening consumer protection, it introduces conduct and operational resilience requirements while aligning several rules with existing financial services standards where similar risks exist.
The measures apply to crypto trading platforms, custodians, stablecoin issuers, lending and borrowing providers, staking firms, and certain decentralized finance businesses with identifiable controlling entities. Consequently, firms operating in these areas will need to comply with the FCA’s new regulatory expectations before the implementation deadline.
New framework expands listing, stablecoin, and market conduct requirements
Under the new rules, UK Qualifying Cryptoasset Trading Platforms must carry out due diligence before listing digital assets. They must also publish qualifying cryptoasset disclosure documents for every asset admitted to trading.
Additionally, the FCA removed an earlier exemption that allowed fungible cryptoassets to trade without disclosure documents. As a result, eligible assets listed on qualifying trading platforms will face a consistent disclosure process.
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Moreover, the regulator finalized a market abuse framework covering insider trading and market manipulation. Large qualifying trading platforms will continue using an industry-led monitoring approach. However, the FCA narrowed certain onchain monitoring obligations while refining requirements covering inside information disclosures and intermediary notifications.
Stablecoin issuers will also operate under new standards governing reserve backing, safeguarding arrangements, customer disclosures, and redemption procedures. Furthermore, the regulator removed redemption forecasting requirements for reserve assets.
It also allows limited intragroup custody arrangements under specific safeguards and permits reserve pools to hold excess backing assets of up to 5%. The prudential framework also changed following industry consultation. Significantly, the FCA reduced the K-SII capital coefficient for stablecoin issuance from 2% to 1%.
FCA opens the authorization window before the October 2027 implementation
The final framework also replaces an earlier two-tier cryptoasset classification proposal. Instead, eligible cryptoassets admitted to UK qualifying trading platforms will follow a single 40% net risk position requirement alongside a 40% counterparty default volatility adjustment.
Meanwhile, firms seeking authorization can submit applications between Sept. 30, 2026, and Feb. 28, 2027. Additionally, the FCA will begin offering pre-application support meetings in July to help businesses prepare their submissions before the authorization window opens.
Existing registrations under the UK’s Money Laundering Regulations will not transfer automatically into the new regime. Therefore, firms conducting regulated cryptoasset activities must obtain FCA authorization before continuing operations under the new framework. Until the rules take effect on Oct. 25, 2027, the FCA will continue supervising crypto firms through financial promotion and anti-money laundering requirements.
David Geale, the FCA’s executive director of payments and digital finance, said the finalized framework marks an important step for crypto regulation in the United Kingdom. He added that the new regime provides firms with greater regulatory certainty while maintaining room for innovation.
Geale also said consumers would benefit from standards that more closely align with traditional financial services, while reminding investors that cryptoassets continue to carry significant investment risks.
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