UK Becomes Global Crypto Hub: FCA Unveils Historic Rules
The United Kingdom is taking a decisive step in regulating digital assets. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has unveiled a set of historic rules aimed at cementing the country’s position as a global crypto hub. This new framework, which follows the February 2026 legislation placing crypto under the UK regulator’s supervision, establishes clear requirements for all industry participants.
Mandatory Authorisation Regime for All Players
At the core of this reform, all crypto-asset firms—including trading platforms, custodians, stablecoin issuers, and staking arrangers—must now obtain FCA authorisation to operate on UK soil. This registration obligation marks a fundamental shift from the previous framework, which relied primarily on Anti-Money Laundering (AML) requirements. In practice, this means that any company handling crypto assets within the British market will need to pass a rigorous approval process before being allowed to offer services to clients.
Affected firms will have a specific application window open from 30 September 2026 to 28 February 2027. After this deadline, any company operating without regulatory approval will face significant penalties. To ease this transition, the FCA is introducing a pre-application support scheme starting in July 2026, allowing candidates to prepare their submissions under the best conditions. This phased timeline is designed to give firms enough time to understand the new obligations and build compliant operations.
Financial Resilience Requirements
The new framework imposes rigorous financial resilience demands on crypto-asset companies. Firms must maintain adequate capital levels and undergo regular stress tests. These measures aim to ensure that market participants have sufficient resources to weather potential market disruptions and protect client interests. The stress tests will simulate adverse market conditions, such as sharp price drops or liquidity crunches, to verify that firms can continue meeting their obligations.
The FCA’s approach draws on international best practices while adapting them to the specificities of the crypto-asset market. The regulator has taken care to ensure that capital requirements are proportionate to actual risks, thereby avoiding imposing disproportionate burdens on companies operating in this innovative sector. For instance, smaller firms may face lighter capital demands than large exchanges, provided they can demonstrate lower risk profiles.
Market Integrity: Combating Abuse
An important part of the regulation concerns market integrity. The FCA establishes strict rules to prevent insider trading and market manipulation. These provisions place crypto assets on an equal footing with traditional financial instruments when it comes to market abuse surveillance. Insider trading in crypto—such as trading on non-public information about a token listing or a protocol upgrade—will now be subject to the same penalties as in conventional markets.
Trading platforms must therefore implement robust surveillance systems capable of detecting suspicious behaviour. Abnormal transactions, attempts to manipulate prices, and trades based on privileged information will now be subject to sanctions comparable to those applicable in traditional finance. The FCA expects platforms to monitor order books, trade volumes, and price patterns for anomalies, and to report any suspicious activity promptly.
Tailored Rules for Staking and Stablecoins
Aware of the sector’s specificities, the UK regulator has crafted trading rules adapted to crypto market mechanics, recognising that the mechanisms of these assets differ significantly from those of conventional financial markets. Staking activities—which allow crypto holders to earn yields by participating in transaction validation—are explicitly included in the regulatory perimeter. The rules cover how staking services are marketed, how rewards are calculated, and how risks are disclosed to users.
Regarding stablecoins—digital assets designed to maintain a stable value—the FCA sets clear and transparent standards. Issuers must demonstrate that their reserves are adequate and that stabilisation mechanisms function correctly. After consulting industry participants, the regulator opted for simplified capital requirements for stablecoin issuers, thereby easing the regulatory burden while maintaining a high level of consumer protection. For example, fiat-backed stablecoins will need to prove that each token is fully backed by liquid assets held in segregated accounts.
A Balance Between Innovation and Regulation
One of the most remarkable aspects of this new framework is the balance it seeks to strike between the need to regulate and the imperative not to stifle innovation. David Geale, executive director of the FCA, underscored this philosophy: “We have created a framework that does not force firms to choose between regulatory certainty and the room to innovate.” This statement reflects the UK’s ambition to become a premier jurisdiction for crypto assets, offering a predictable and business-friendly regulatory environment while ensuring adequate investor protection.
The UK is thus seeking to attract talent and capital in the sector while avoiding the excesses observed in other jurisdictions. The approach is deliberately gradual: instead of imposing all rules at once, the FCA will phase them in, allowing the industry to adapt and the regulator to learn from early implementation.
Implementation Timeline
The new rules will come into force in October 2027, giving firms sufficient time to prepare. In the meantime, several key...
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