Svmuu News: The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) officially announced its regulatory framework for crypto assets this week. The framework is widely viewed by the industry as an international approach that emphasizes “access to global liquidity,” but its implementation still faces significant compliance and approval challenges.
Under the new regulations, the FCA allows overseas trading platforms to serve UK users through locally authorized branches and to access global trading infrastructure, thereby avoiding the creation of a closed, domestic liquidity pool. At the same time, stablecoins not issued in the UK may also circulate in the UK market—a stance seen as distinctly different from the regional isolation model outlined in the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA). The “Qualified Crypto-Asset Trading Platform” (QCATP) mechanism in the new regulations is viewed as a key structure connecting global exchanges with the UK market and is expected to enhance price efficiency and market depth. However, industry insiders point out that the FCA has not yet clarified which jurisdictions are deemed to offer “comparable regulatory protection,” and this uncertainty may influence companies’ strategic decisions.
Furthermore, rules related to decentralized finance (DeFi) remain unclear, and some industry practitioners are concerned that early proposals may restrict centralized platforms’ access to the DeFi ecosystem, causing the UK to lag behind other jurisdictions in this area of innovation.
On the compliance front, lawyers note that under the new Financial Services and Markets Act framework, the authorization process may be extremely rigorous; historical data shows that the approval rate for FCA anti-money laundering registration applications is less than 15%. The new system will also encompass multi-dimensional regulatory requirements covering consumer protection, capital adequacy, operational resilience, and executive accountability, significantly raising the barriers to entry.
Industry observers believe that, overall, this framework provides an institutional foundation for institutional capital to enter the crypto market; however, whether the UK can truly become a global crypto hub will depend on the certainty of regulatory enforcement and the efficiency of the approval process in the coming months. (CoinDesk)