UK's FCA Seeks Views on Stablecoins, Crypto Custody to Prevent Firm Failures
The country's market regulator's proposed rules are meant to ensure stablecoins maintain their value and seek to reduce the likelihood of stablecoin and crypto custody companies failing.

What to know:
- The U.K.'s FCA is seeking additional views on its upcoming stablecoin regime.
- The markets regulator's proposed rules are meant to ensure stablecoins maintain their value and seek to reduce the likelihood of stablecoin and crypto custody companies failing.
The U.K.'s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is seeking additional views on its upcoming stablecoins regime, it said on Wednesday.
"In support of the opportunities stablecoins present to financial services and the broader economy, the FCA will explore adding a specific focus on stablecoins to its innovation services in the coming months," the FCA's statement said.
The FCA's proposed rules are meant to ensure stablecoins maintain their value and seek to reduce the likelihood of stablecoin and crypto custody companies failing.
Stablecoins have been something regulators have been watching carefully following the collapse of the algorithmic stablecoin terraUSD in 2022 that resulted in investors losing out on their life savings.
The FCA has been establishing its new crypto regime since 2023. In 2023 it published a discussion paper with proposals for a stablecoins regime. The regulator has since upped its efforts to regulate the sector by releasing a series of discussion papers for the industry and the U.K. government is working on establishing new legislation to ensure the country's regulators have all the powers they need to launch their new regimes for the digital asset sector.
The FCA will be working with the Bank of England to regulate stablecoins.
"For those stablecoins that expect to operate at systemic scale, the Bank of England will publish a complementary consultation paper later this year, including responding to industry feedback around allowing some return on backing assets," Sarah Breeden, deputy governor for financial stability at the Bank of England said.
More For You
Regulation, derivatives helping drive TradFi institutions into crypto, panellists say

Non-participation in decentralized finance is becoming a career risk for traditional finance professionals, panellists said.
What to know:
- Major financial institutions are expanding into crypto derivatives as clearer U.S. regulation helps make digital assets a mainstream portfolio allocation.
- New products such as overnight rate futures, multitoken indexes and access to DeFi liquidity are enabling institutional investors to move beyond bitcoin into broader crypto exposure and arbitrage strategies.
- Futures and other derivatives, underpinned by a robust industrywide beta benchmark, will channel trillions of dollars of institutional capital into crypto, making non-participation a growing career risk for traditional finance professionals, panellists said.











