Global Crypto Regulation "Closing the Net": Hong Kong, EU, US Simultaneously Take Action, Is the Compliance Window Closing?
Global Crypto Regulation Tightens: Hong Kong, EU, and US Simultaneously Enforce Rules, Closing the Compliance Window?
The global virtual asset regulatory landscape is shifting from rule-making to enforcement. Recent moves by Hong Kong, the EU, and the US signal a coordinated push towards market restructuring based on licensing, product classification, custody, and client segmentation.
**Hong Kong**'s SFC issued a circular on "Relevant Stablecoins" on May 27, formally establishing a two-tier regulatory architecture where the HKMA oversees issuance and the SFC oversees trading and distribution. This creates differentiated, often lighter-touch, rules for compliant, licensed stablecoins compared to other virtual assets, fitting into a broader strategy to develop stablecoins as settlement infrastructure, tokenized securities as investment products, and licensed VATP platforms as distribution channels.
The **European Union** is approaching a critical deadline, with the MiCA transition period ending on July 1. After this date, unlicensed Crypto-Asset Service Providers (CASPs) must cease serving EU clients. With only about 210 authorized CASPs across 23 member states so far, a significant market consolidation is expected, as the application process now takes 6-9 months.
In the **United States**, the CLARITY Act passed a key Senate committee vote on May 14. This landmark bill aims to clarify jurisdiction between the SEC and CFTC, establish registration rules for trading platforms and custodians, and create a federal framework for stablecoin regulation. A key compromise prohibits "passive yield" on stablecoin balances but allows "activity rewards" tied to specific functions like payments.
The convergence of these regulatory actions highlights a fundamental shift: stablecoins, with a payment volume rivaling major card networks, are being treated as critical financial infrastructure rather than unregulated digital assets. The core message is clear: compliance is transitioning from an operational cost to a mandatory license for market access, determining which players will participate in the next phase of the digital asset economy.
marsbit5 ч. назад