{"id":371384,"date":"2023-01-26T20:26:52","date_gmt":"2023-01-27T01:26:52","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/insidebitcoins.com\/?p=371384"},"modified":"2023-01-26T20:30:52","modified_gmt":"2023-01-27T01:30:52","slug":"how-european-cryptocurrency-companies-are-preparing-for-broad-legislation-with-mica-at-the-door","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/insidebitcoins.com\/news\/how-european-cryptocurrency-companies-are-preparing-for-broad-legislation-with-mica-at-the-door","title":{"rendered":"How European cryptocurrency companies are preparing for broad legislation with MiCA at the Door"},"content":{"rendered":"
Local crypto firms are preparing for the transition as the extensive Market in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation of the European Union progressively approaches becoming law. The new standards are more stringent than those currently in effect in some European nations, and they will become the law for all 27 EU member states.<\/p>\n
Along with highly specific guidelines and restrictions for stablecoin<\/a> issuers, MiCA also mandates an unprecedented degree of openness from cryptocurrency exchanges.<\/p>\n According to the law, crypto businesses are required to settle all trades the same day they occur in addition to updating the public on their pricing methodology and trading volumes in real time. Exchanges are required to keep customer funds and their own funds, including cryptocurrency<\/a>, separate. Insider trading is expressly forbidden by the regulation as well.<\/p>\n The most significant aspect of MiCA is the introduction of a universal licensing method for all EU member states, making it the broadest piece of legislation of its sort ever created.<\/p>\n The founder of the French blockchain company Arianee, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Montagnon, said that<\/p>\n The licensing requirements and other regulations under the MICA are “more complex, more sophisticated” than those currently set by the French regulator. During the MICA process, they took a large part of what was done in France and made it deeper.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Licenses are now only required in France for cryptocurrency businesses that offer any type of crypto custody, which means they keep users’ money in their own accounts. Licensing is optional for individuals who don’t offer custody services. It will be required of everyone under MiCA, an EU-wide directive that must be implemented at the member-state level.<\/p>\n For the 60 businesses who have previously registered with the French Financial Markets Authority (AMF) and “have already changed their processes to what the French regulator requested them to do,” according to Montagnon, not much will change on the initial site. Nothing in MiCA is beyond of reach for a startup, according to the organization.<\/p>\n There will be one significant adjustment, though: startups in France may struggle if the final version of MiCA requires cryptocurrency service providers to obtain business insurance, according to Montagnon.<\/p>\nCryptocurrency banking and insurance<\/h2>\n