Nawa Rendvik

Pierwotnie opublikowano przez Taylor Wessing dnia 2026-01-12

24 maja 2026 · 2 min czytania

Trylogia konsultacji FCA w sprawie kryptowalut od środka: praktyczny przewodnik

Trzy dokumenty konsultacyjne FCA opublikowane pod koniec 2025 roku określają szczegółowe zasady dla brytyjskich firm kryptowalutowych — od platform handlowych po nadużycia rynkowe. Przedstawiamy najważniejsze propozycje oraz kluczowe terminy.

Opracowanie omawiające rodzaje portfeli kryptowalutowych służących do bezpiecznego trzymania aktywów cyfrowych

If the UK government's December 2025 announcement was the headline, then the three consultation papers published by the Financial Conduct Authority are the fine print. Together, CP25/40, CP25/41, and CP25/42 form the most detailed regulatory blueprint for cryptoassets ever produced by a major financial regulator — and firms operating in the UK market need to understand exactly what these documents contain.


CP25/40: The Activities Framework

The first paper tackles the broadest question: which crypto activities will require FCA authorization? The answer is, essentially, all of them. The scope covers trading platforms, intermediaries, lending and borrowing services, staking providers, and even certain decentralized finance activities. Larger platforms — those exceeding GBP 10 million in average annual revenue — face additional obligations, including non-discriminatory access rules and stricter transparency requirements.

For retail lending specifically, the FCA proposes mandatory over-collateralization requirements. This is a direct response to the wave of crypto lending platform failures in 2022–2023 and a signal that the regulator has closely examined how insolvencies unfold in this sector.


CP25/41: Disclosure and Market Abuse

The second paper introduces requirements that will feel familiar to anyone who has worked in traditional securities markets. Issuers seeking admission to UK trading platforms must prepare qualifying cryptoasset disclosure documents — essentially prospectuses — including a two-page summary highlighting the key risks. The market abuse regime prohibits insider dealing and market manipulation, and large platforms are required to monitor on-chain activity for suspicious patterns.

This is where the regulation becomes genuinely groundbreaking. Monitoring on-chain activity for market abuse is a technical challenge with no

Source: Taylor Wessing