Key Highlights BoE finalizes regulatory framework for sterling stablecoins targeting 2027 deployment £40 billion temporary ceiling imposed on systemically important tokens Reserve composition
Key Highlights
BoE finalizes regulatory framework for sterling stablecoins targeting 2027 deployment
£40 billion temporary ceiling imposed on systemically important tokens
Reserve composition permits 70% allocation to UK sovereign debt instruments
Individual user holding restrictions removed following industry consultation
Joint regulatory oversight model established between BoE and FCA
The Bank of England has published a comprehensive regulatory framework governing sterling-denominated stablecoins, positioning the United Kingdom for a supervised launch in 2027. The proposed guidelines establish stringent requirements for reserve management, redemption processes, and token issuance specifically targeting digital currencies deemed systemically significant. Notably, the framework abandons previously suggested individual holding thresholds in favor of aggregate issuance limitations.
Enhanced Flexibility for Interest-Generating Reserves
Under the updated Stablecoin Rules, token issuers may allocate up to 70% of backing reserves into short-dated UK government securities. This represents an increase from the earlier 60% threshold proposed during initial consultations, with the remainder required in central bank deposits. The adjustment provides operators with enhanced yield opportunities while maintaining sufficient liquidity for user withdrawals.
A minimum 30% allocation to central bank deposits remains mandatory for all systemically designated issuers. This requirement ensures immediate access to liquid capital necessary for processing redemption requests and maintaining market confidence. Regulators believe this dual-layer approach achieves an optimal balance between economic sustainability and consumer protection.
The modified framework emerged from extensive industry commentary received following the November 2025 consultation period. Market participants expressed concerns that overly restrictive reserve mandates would disadvantage UK-issued tokens compared to international competitors. Nevertheless, the Bank maintained direct reserve oversight given the potential systemic implications for payment infrastructure and broader financial stability.
Aggregate Issuance Ceiling Supersedes Individual Restrictions
Authorities have eliminated previously proposed holding limits of £20,000 for retail users and £10 million for institutional participants. The revised framework instead implements a £40 billion aggregate issuance threshold applicable to each systemically important token. This approach removes account-level restrictions while still controlling overall market exposure.
The issuance ceiling aims to prevent rapid capital flight from traditional banking deposits into stablecoin reserves. Substantial fund migrations could diminish bank liquidity and constrain lending capacity for consumers and enterprises. The temporary guardrail will persist until regulators determine that associated credit risks have adequately subsided.
The regulatory framework mandates periodic reassessment of the £40 billion threshold and its macroeconomic consequences. Officials intend to lift the restriction once systemic concerns regarding bank funding stability and credit provision are satisfactorily mitigated. Industry representatives continue advocating for more definitive timelines and differentiated risk assessments based on varying operational models.
Implementation Timeline Points to Late 2027 Rollout
The central bank has established September 22, 2026 as the deadline for public commentary on the draft Code of Practice. Finalization of the comprehensive regulatory framework is scheduled for completion before year-end 2026. Authorized systemically important stablecoins could commence operations under the new British regulatory regime throughout 2027.
Supervisory responsibilities will be distributed between the Bank of England and the Financial Conduct Authority across the stablecoin ecosystem. The Bank will assume oversight for systemically designated payment tokens, while the FCA will govern non-systemic variants and exchange-traded products. HM Treasury retains authority to designate which tokens warrant systemic classification.
The framework additionally establishes transition protocols for entities migrating from FCA jurisdiction into systemic supervision. Supplementary guidance documents will accompany the FCA’s finalized standards and implementation materials expected later this year. This comprehensive regulatory architecture represents a cornerstone of Britain’s strategic initiative to advance digital payment systems and tokenized financial infrastructure.
The post UK Finalizes Stablecoin Framework Ahead of 2027 Regulatory Launch appeared first on Blockonomi.