BitGo has secured regulatory approval from Germany's Federal Financial Supervisory Authority, BaFin, enabling the U.S. crypto custody provider to expand its services across the European Union's member countries.
The license positions BitGo as one of the first American digital asset firms to gain recognition under the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework, a unified regulatory system, rolling out crypto custody services for its institutional clients across the bloc this year.
BitGo has received a MiCA license from BaFin, marking a significant milestone in our European expansion.
This approval extends our digital asset services across the EU—supporting both crypto-native companies and TradFi institutions, including banks and asset managers, seeking a… pic.twitter.com/wuyf6P01kg
Receiving the approval shows its "commitment to the highest standards of security, transparency, and trust," Harald Patt, managing director of the company's European arm, said in a statement released Monday.
BitGo broke ground for its EU headquarters in Frankfurt in 2023 as part of a broader push to expand across the Eurozone.
Since launching its BitGo Europe subsidiary, the firm has secured registrations in countries including Italy, Spain, Poland, and Greece. Its approval from BaFin enables it to operate across all 27 EU member states under a single regulatory framework.
The company joins other crypto businesses that have pursued EU credentials, including Circle and Crypto.com.
Circle, the issuer of the USDC and EURC stablecoins, has announced its compliance with the European Union's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulatory framework, becoming the first global stablecoin issuer to do so.
The company obtained an Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license from France's banking regulatory authority, the Autorité de Contrôle Prudentiel et de Résolution (ACPR).
"Since our founding, Circle has sought to build durable, compliant, and well-regulated infrastructure for stable...
What is the MiCA framework?
The Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation is the European Union's first comprehensive legal framework for crypto assets.
Passed by the European Parliament in April 2023, MiCA aims to harmonize rules across EU member states, covering stablecoins, exchanges, and custodial services. It requires crypto firms to register with national regulators and meet consumer protection, transparency, and capital requirements.
StablecoinStablecoin issuers, meanwhile, face strict oversight, including reserve mandates. MiCA also targets market abuse and insider trading in crypto markets.
BitGo's European regulatory win contrasts with its experience in the United States, where the firm faced issues with its plans to become a qualified custody solution in New York in 2020, amid friction with the Securities and Exchange Commission, then led by Gary Gensler.
In March this year, the U.S. Treasury met with BitGo and other Bitcoin custodians in the U.S., convening on a panel called "Safeguarding America's Bitcoin."
It was early April, during the middle of a conversation with Decrypt at Cantor Fitzgerald’s swanky midtown Manhattan headquarters, that Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino abruptly asked to pause the interview. The reason? He’d noticed a “weird message” on the laptop open in front of him.
After twenty seconds of silence in the conference room, Ardoino’s face flashed a big grin. Reports were circulating that Circle, one of Tether’s chief competitors, might tap the brakes on its long-planned IPO.
”People w...
Circle’s stock price soared on Thursday alongside the stablecoin issuer’s debut on the New York Stock Exchange, capturing Wall Street’s growing embrace of digital dollars, according to analysts.
As a $250 billion industry, stablecoins may not be a large part of the financial system today, but Circle’s initial public offering shows that Wall Street investors are looking toward the years ahead, Gerry O'Shea, head of global market insights at asset manager Hashdex, told Decrypt.
“It's a recognition...
Stablecoin legislation may unlock a slew of new competitors for Circle and its USDC stablecoin in the U.S., but in the realm of decentralized finance, or DeFi, a serious rival is unlikely to emerge anytime soon, according to analysts at investment bank Compass Point.
Although Tether’s USDT is king in emerging markets, Circle’s USDC stablecoin has a dominant presence across the crypto industry’s growing number of decentralized exchanges, lending protocols, and other DeFi settings, analyst Ed Enge...