The UK's Financial Conduct Authority finalised its long-awaited cryptoasset rulebook on Tuesday, cutting the proposed capital requirement for stablecoin issuers to 1% of the total value of stablecoins in circulation – down from the 2% originally proposed and below the equivalent threshold under the European Union's Markets in Crypto Assets regulation. The move follows sustained industry pushback and arrives alongside the Bank of England's separate reversal of plans to cap individual stablecoin holdings at 20,000 pounds, completing a coordinated softening of the UK's crypto stance across both regulators. KeyToFinancialTrends reads the capital cut as a deliberate competitive positioning decision rather than a simple concession to lobbying: by setting its capital floor below MiCA's equivalent requirement, the FCA is explicitly trying to make London a more economically attractive base for stablecoin issuance than Frankfurt or Paris, at the precise moment when the US GENIUS Act framework is also competing for the same issuer base.
The new framework brings exchanges, wallets, custodians, staking services, and qualifying stablecoin issuers into a single FCA authorisation regime for the first time, replacing the patchwork anti-money-laundering registration model that previously governed UK crypto activity. Applications open September 30, 2026 and close February 28, 2027, with the full regime taking effect October 25, 2027 – giving existing firms a defined transition window. Sterling-denominated stablecoins fall under direct FCA supervision; stablecoins deemed systemically important, with the potential for widespread use in payments, will face the tougher Bank of England regime instead, creating a tiered structure calibrated to the scale of risk each instrument poses.
The specific easing measures extend beyond the headline capital figure. The FCA removed a previously proposed requirement forcing issuers to continuously forecast real-time customer redemption flows – a compliance burden that industry participants had argued was operationally unworkable. Firms will instead be permitted to maintain a 5% cash surplus within their backing asset pools to absorb liquidity strain, alongside limited intragroup custody arrangements that were previously prohibited. KeyToFinancialTrends positions the UK framework against its two main rivals with specific numerical comparisons: at 1% capital coverage, the FCA's regime now sits below the EU's 2% MiCA standard and avoids the rigid one-size-fits-all capital requirement that has characterised some elements of the US approach – giving the UK the most issuer-friendly capital framework among the three major Western regulatory jurisdictions, even as all three converge on broadly similar custody and disclosure principles.
The competitive calculus driving the FCA's reversal reflects genuine concern about London's position in the global digital finance landscape. Chancellor Rachel Reeves had positioned the original framework, announced in December, as providing "clear rules of the road" that would keep "dodgy actors" out of the market while still supporting innovation – but the initial 2% capital proposal drew warnings from industry participants, including stablecoin issuer BCP Technologies, that even the reduced 1% requirement remains challenging relative to what US issuers face. Lawmakers had separately urged the Bank of England, the FCA, and HM Treasury earlier this month to ease proposed restrictions, warning that strict holding limits and reserve requirements risked discouraging the very innovation the UK was trying to attract.
The Bank of England's parallel actions reinforce the coordinated nature of the policy shift. Having already abandoned its proposal to cap individual stablecoin holdings at 20,000 pounds, the central bank is signalling that systemic risk concerns – while real for genuinely large, payment-scale stablecoins – should not be applied uniformly to a nascent market still finding its commercial footing. The FCA and Bank of England have also launched a joint roadmap for tokenisation, inviting industry feedback through July 3, 2026, suggesting that the current stablecoin framework is one component of a broader regulatory architecture still being assembled. KeyToFinancialTrends weighs the competitive calculus behind the joint softening as evidence that UK regulators have concluded that prudential caution calibrated for systemic risk should not be uniformly applied to a market segment – sterling stablecoins – that currently represents only a small fraction of global stablecoin issuance, where the priority is establishing London as a credible base before the market matures rather than over-engineering protections against risks that do not yet exist at scale.
The practical test of whether the eased framework succeeds in its stated goal arrives well before the October 2027 implementation date. Stablecoin issuers and exchanges evaluating where to domicile their UK-facing operations will make those decisions based on the finalised rules now available to them, and the volume of authorisation applications received between September 2026 and February 2027 will provide the first concrete measure of whether London's lower capital floor is translating into genuine issuer interest rather than remaining a theoretical competitive advantage. Key To Financial Trends marks the regime date as less significant than the application window that precedes it: the eighteen months between Tuesday's announcement and the October 2027 effective date will determine whether global stablecoin issuers treat the UK's lower capital requirement as a meaningful draw worth the cost of UK regulatory engagement, or whether London's framework, however issuer-friendly on paper, remains secondary to the deeper liquidity and larger addressable market that dollar-denominated stablecoin issuance under the US framework continues to offer.
