The British government is moving forward with its plans to regulate the cryptography industry. On April 29, the British government published a project called “regulatory regime for cryptocurrency (regulated activities) – SI and political note” on their offensive website.
The proposed law of 27 pages aims to officially regulate cryptography activities such as commercial exchange operations, stabing issuance, childcare activities as well as the purchase and sale of cryptocurrency and the provision of services as an ignition supplier.
All companies wishing to engage in these activities must have received approval from the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), the regulatory body supervising companies and financial service markets in the United Kingdom,
In the project, the “qualification cryptoassets” are digital tokens that are fungible and can also be transferred.
The proposal also creates a special category of stablescoins with “qualifying stablescoins” – tokens “armored towards traditional currencies such as the book or the US dollar, which are designed to maintain stable value via fiduciary funding reserves or other assets.
If the rules are approved, anyone who operates a crypto trading platform or publishes stablecoin in the United Kingdom will have to comply with strict standards.
Cryptographic guards – Companies that store their customers’ crypto – will also be under regulation to prevent assets from being endangered.
Second, new plans to approach market abuses and guarantee transparent disclosure concerning cryptographic products are also underway.
Before officially establishing the regulations, the government published this project to request public comments from the public. He asked that all comments be rendered on May 23, 2025.
The objective, said the Treasury, is to protect consumers, to encourage innovation and to cement the status of the United Kingdom as a worldwide global financial center – a position that would now definitively include digital assets.
The subsequent rules relating to the obligations of abuse and disclosure of the cryptographic market will be published separately.