The Bank of England has published a policy statement on regulating sterling-denominated systemic stablecoins, softening elements of its earlier proposed framework after receiving feedback fro
The Bank of England has published a policy statement on regulating sterling-denominated systemic stablecoins, softening elements of its earlier proposed framework after receiving feedback from market participants and industry stakeholders.
The central bank's June 2026 policy statement follows a consultation paper issued in 2025 that laid out a proposed regulatory regime for systemic stablecoins. The updated rules reflect adjustments made in response to concerns raised during the consultation period.
What Changed in the Bank of England's Stablecoin Framework
The Bank of England's original 2025 consultation proposed a regulatory regime for sterling-denominated systemic stablecoins that drew scrutiny from issuers and financial institutions over its compliance requirements. The policy statement published in June 2026 represents the regulator's formal response, with revised draft rules that ease certain provisions.
The accompanying announcement confirmed that the Bank launched both the policy statement and updated draft rules simultaneously, signaling its intent to move toward a finalized regulatory framework.
This development comes as the broader question of how regulators classify digital assets continues to shape markets. In the United States, the debate over whether crypto perpetual contracts hinge on regulatory classification highlights similar tensions between innovation and oversight across jurisdictions.
Why Market Feedback Prompted Regulatory Calibration
The shift from consultation paper to eased policy statement suggests the Bank received substantial pushback on its initial proposals. Central banks routinely adjust draft rules after consultation, but the explicit framing of the changes as responsive to market concerns underscores the weight of industry feedback in this case.
The UK Parliament has also been examining the regulatory landscape for digital assets. A House of Lords Financial Services Regulation Committee report has explored the broader framework for crypto oversight, adding legislative scrutiny alongside the Bank of England's prudential approach.
The regulatory recalibration arrives during a period of increased institutional activity in crypto markets, with developments such as Bitwise bringing crypto model portfolios to retail apps and ongoing Bitcoin ETF filings reflecting growing mainstream demand for digital asset products.
What This Means for UK Stablecoin Oversight
The policy statement positions the Bank of England as one of the first major central banks to publish revised stablecoin rules that explicitly incorporate industry feedback. For issuers operating or planning to operate sterling-denominated stablecoins, the eased framework could lower compliance barriers while maintaining prudential safeguards.
The next phase will likely involve finalization of the draft rules and a defined timeline for implementation. Stablecoin issuers targeting the UK market will need to monitor whether the final rules retain the eased provisions or face further revision.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
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