MiCA Spurs 14 Stablecoin Issuers, 39 CASPs, and Counting
The post MiCA Spurs 14 Stablecoin Issuers, 39 CASPs, and Counting appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Europe’s landmark crypto regulation, MiCA, is now six months into its full rollout, quietly reshaping the rules for crypto firms and stablecoin issuers. New licenses, stablecoin approvals, and early compliance trends hint at how the bloc’s ambitious regulatory experiment is unfolding. MiCA Marks Six Months As of July, 14 stablecoin (e-money token) issuers from seven EU countries, including France, Germany, Malta, and the Netherlands, have secured authorization. These countries have collectively issued 20 EMTs: 12 euro-denominated, seven dollar-denominated, and one Czech koruna-denominated, according to the update shared by Circle Director of EU Strategy and Policy Advisor Patrick Hansen. Meanwhile, 39 CASPs are now MiCA-licensed across nine EU/EEA jurisdictions, with Germany and the Netherlands leading license issuances. These licensed entities span traditional financial institutions such as BBVA and Clearstream, fintech players like N26 and eToro, and crypto-native firms including Coinbase, Kraken, and Bitpanda. Interestingly, no asset-referenced token (ART) issuers have emerged, which means that limited market demand in this segment despite regulatory clarity. Around 30 whitepapers under MiCA Title II have been notified for crypto-assets, including Bitcoin and Ethereum, which reflects a growing interest in compliant token offerings. The Netherlands, Poland, Hungary, Latvia, Slovenia, and Finland have now completed their transition periods. The Dutch AFM has emerged as an active licensing authority. However, over 35 firms have been flagged as non-compliant CASPs, primarily by Italy’s CONSOB. Hansen tweeted, “6 months into its full application, MiCA is clearly gaining momentum. Companies across Europe are seeking to receive their license in order to passport their services into 30 EEA countries. The race is on!” Impact As MiCA’s rollout continues, all eyes are now turning to what the regulation will mean in numbers for Europe’s existing crypto players. According to a report by CoinLaw, over 10,000 crypto businesses in the EU will face direct…
Filed under: News - @ July 13, 2025 5:17 pm