- The Bank of England initiates consultation on GBP stablecoin regulation.
- Temporary holding limits for issuers may impact the market.
- Previous proposals are revised to encourage innovation.
The Bank of England has initiated a consultation on regulatory measures for systemic GBP stablecoins, focusing on temporary holding limits to enhance digital asset supervision in the UK.
The consultation aims to structure financial stability for GBP stablecoins, potentially affecting market liquidity and integrating UK government debt into stablecoin backing.
The Bank of England has initiated a consultation on the regulatory framework for systemic stablecoins in sterling, applying temporary holding limits for issuers. This marks a major step in the UK’s evolving supervision of digital assets, aiming for implementation next year.
The primary entity is the Bank of England, led by Deputy Governor Sarah Breeden. She emphasized the significance of these proposals for the UK’s stablecoin regime, responding to previous feedback to involve the central bank in issuer interactions.
Sarah Breeden, Deputy Governor for Financial Stability, Bank of England, said, “Today’s proposals mark a pivotal step towards implementing the UK’s stablecoin regime next year…We’ve listened carefully to feedback and amended our proposals for achieving this, including on how stablecoin issuers interact with the Bank of England.”
Issuers of systemic GBP stablecoins will now have the ability to invest up to 60% of backing assets in short-term UK government debt. This adjustment aims to balance potential yield with regulatory oversight to prevent systemic risks. The transition also includes a temporary regime allowing up to 95% investment in short-term debt initially. This initiative could influence not just GBP-denoted assets, but also widespread market participants through liquidity and on/off ramp alterations.
The consultation does not currently detail any new funding allocations or institutional inflows. Historical precedents suggest regulatory changes often trigger market volatility and asset reallocation, echoing past interventions in stablecoin spaces by EU and U.S. authorities.
Potential financial outcomes could involve impacts on DeFi governance tokens and synthetic GBP instruments. Past resistance to holding requirements has been revised to encourage innovation, reflecting stakeholder feedback for a balanced regulatory approach.
