Spanish Bank BBVA Gets Green Light to Offer BTC and ETH Trading: Report
BBVA had been working on allowing crypto trading services since 2020.

What to know:
- Spanish financial giant Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA) has received approval from Spain's financial regulator to offer bitcoin and ether trading to its clients, as the Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation takes effect across the European Union.
- This approval concludes a multi-year process for BBVA to allow its clients to gain exposure to digital assets.
- BBVA, which launched crypto trading in Turkey in January, is not the first European bank to enter the crypto market, with Deutsche Bank and Société Générale also offering crypto-related services.
Spanish financial giant Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA) has gotten approval from the country's financial regulator to offer bitcoin
The approval come as the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation takes full effect across the European Union. This approval for BBVA marks the conclusion of a multi-year process for the Spanish lender to allow for its clients to get exposure to digital assets.
In 2020, CoinDesk reported that BBVA planned to dip its toes in the sector, pending regulatory approval because MiCA wasn't yet in place.
BBVA initially planned to launch its crypto services from Switzerland rather than Spain or other EU countries because Switzerland already had a clear regulatory framework for digital assets under the Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA).
In January, BBVA launched crypto trading in Turkey through a local subsidiary.
BBVA isn’t the first European bank to enter crypto, with Germany's Deutsche Bank developing an Ethereum rollup with ZKsync and offering custody with Taurus, while Société Générale’s SG-FORGE is launching a euro stablecoin on the XRP Ledger, CoinDesk previously reported.
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SEC makes quiet shift to brokers' stablecoin holdings that may pack big results

The securities regulator has continued its Project Crypto work to make unofficial policy changes as it moved to let broker-dealers treat stablecoins as capital.
Cosa sapere:
- The addition of a few lines in a frequently-asked-questions page on the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission website may open up the use of stablecoins in capital calculations for U.S. broker-dealers.
- The agency is instructing brokers that they need only give their stablecoins a 2% haircut when calculating how much they can be used as regulatory capital.











