FCA Does Not Want Britons to Buy Crypto on Credit

By: finance magnates|2025/05/02 10:45:01
0
Share
copy
The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is exploring restrictions on UK residents purchasing cryptocurrencies on credit, and is now seeking public feedback on this and other proposed regulatory measures. “We are considering a range of restrictions, including limiting the use of credit cards to directly buy cryptoassets, and using a credit line provided by an e-money firm to do so,” the discussion paper titled Regulating Cryptoassets Activities noted. However, the British agency would exempt authorised stablecoin purchases from these credit restrictions. You may also like: FCA Will Be Clear with Its CFDs Data Requirement Britain’s Move Towards Crypto Regulations The proposal came only a few days after the UK government announced its plans to regulate the local cryptocurrency industry. According to a recent YouGov survey, the number of Britons purchasing cryptocurrencies more than doubled, from 6 per cent in 2022 to 14 per cent last year. “Crypto is a growing industry. Currently largely unregulated, we want to create a crypto regime that gives firms the clarity they need to safely innovate, while delivering appropriate levels of market integrity and consumer protection,” said David Geale, Executive Director of Payments and Digital Finance at the FCA. “Our aim is to drive sustainable, long-term growth of crypto in the UK.” Read more: UK Targets Crypto Exchanges With New Rules as Adoption Triples to 12% Currently, the FCA requires all locally operated crypto firms to register with it. However, its oversight is limited to anti-money laundering rules, the financial promotions regime, and consumer protection legislation. Despite the mandatory registration requirement, the FCA rejected 86 per cent of applications from crypto firms in the 12 months ending April 2024. In the ongoing financial year, however, the rejection rate has declined to 75 per cent. Controlling the Operations of Crypto Platforms The British regulator has also raised concerns about market abuse, disclosures, stablecoins, custody, and prudential matters. It proposes that all crypto trading platforms must treat trades equally, separate their proprietary trading activities from those of retail customers, and be transparent about pricing and trade executions. Furthermore, the discussion paper proposed banning trading platforms from paying intermediaries for order flow. The FCA would also require crypto companies offering services in the UK to operate through an authorised local legal entity. Additionally, consumers with staked cryptocurrencies who suffer losses due to third-party actions must be compensated. Although the regulator does not intend to cover decentralised finance operations run solely by lines of code, any such platform with a “clear controlling person” would fall under the scope of UK crypto regulations. The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is exploring restrictions on UK residents purchasing cryptocurrencies on credit, and is now seeking public feedback on this and other proposed regulatory measures. “We are considering a range of restrictions, including limiting the use of credit cards to directly buy cryptoassets, and using a credit line provided by an e-money firm to do so,” the discussion paper titled Regulating Cryptoassets Activities noted. However, the British agency would exempt authorised stablecoin purchases from these credit restrictions. You may also like: FCA Will Be Clear with Its CFDs Data Requirement Britain’s Move Towards Crypto Regulations The proposal came only a few days after the UK government announced its plans to regulate the local cryptocurrency industry. According to a recent YouGov survey, the number of Britons purchasing cryptocurrencies more than doubled, from 6 per cent in 2022 to 14 per cent last year. “Crypto is a growing industry. Currently largely unregulated, we want to create a crypto regime that gives firms the clarity they need to safely innovate, while delivering appropriate levels of market integrity and consumer protection,” said David Geale, Executive Director of Payments and Digital Finance at the FCA. “Our aim is to drive sustainable, long-term growth of crypto in the UK.” Read more: UK Targets Crypto Exchanges With New Rules as Adoption Triples to 12% Currently, the FCA requires all locally operated crypto firms to register with it. However, its oversight is limited to anti-money laundering rules, the financial promotions regime, and consumer protection legislation. Despite the mandatory registration requirement, the FCA rejected 86 per cent of applications from crypto firms in the 12 months ending April 2024. In the ongoing financial year, however, the rejection rate has declined to 75 per cent. Controlling the Operations of Crypto Platforms The British regulator has also raised concerns about market abuse, disclosures, stablecoins, custody, and prudential matters. It proposes that all crypto trading platforms must treat trades equally, separate their proprietary trading activities from those of retail customers, and be transparent about pricing and trade executions. Furthermore, the discussion paper proposed banning trading platforms from paying intermediaries for order flow. The FCA would also require crypto companies offering services in the UK to operate through an authorised local legal entity. Additionally, consumers with staked cryptocurrencies who suffer losses due to third-party actions must be compensated. Although the regulator does not intend to cover decentralised finance operations run solely by lines of code, any such platform with a “clear controlling person” would fall under the scope of UK crypto regulations.

-- Price

--

You may also like

What you bought on CEX is really not US stocks: Analyzing the 94% liquidation monopoly and the evaporation of equity under a five-layer pipeline

Peeling back its smooth trading interface to examine the underlying legal relationships and settlement processes, you will find that this is far from a simple "RWA asset revolution," but rather a complex game of interests involving spot pricing, rights ownership, and the monopoly of underlying custo...

In such a crowded cross-border payment arena, where is the next stop for the future?

Only by stepping into the mud can one have the chance to touch gold.

Why Is Bitcoin Down in 2026? What We Can Learn From 2022

Why is Bitcoin down in 2026? Bitcoin has just recorded its worst first half since 2022, with back-to-back quarterly losses, record ETF outflows, and extreme fear. Here's what history says, how 2026 differs from the last bear market, and the three signals traders should wat

The large models in the United States are moving towards closure in the name of security

The government successfully inserted itself as an approver between commercial AI models and their users for the first time.

From the white-haired stock god to the billionaire fund mogul, the smart people shorting Nvidia are all getting rich using the same framework

Give up on heavily investing in Nvidia's "nine major bottlenecks"! This article analyzes the underlying logic behind top AI investors making billions: physical infrastructure such as electricity, HBM, and optical interconnects are the true keys to wealth in AI hardware.

Morning Report | CoinEx becomes a key hub for Iran to evade sanctions, involving over $3.8 billion in funds; Kalshi seeks a new round of financing, with a valuation potentially rising to $40 billion

Overview of Important Market Events on June 25

Popular coins

Latest Crypto News

Read more
iconiconiconiconiconiconicon
Customer Support:@weikecs
Business Cooperation:@weikecs
Quant Trading & MM:bd@weex.com
VIP Program:support@weex.com