The UK has announced that its cryptocurrency regulation bill will be unveiled in early 2025. The document will be presented at a conference dedicated to financial innovations and asset tokenization, which will take place in London.
The UK Treasury aims to create favorable conditions for regulating stablecoins. Initially, the bill was planned to be passed in the summer of this year, but its adoption was temporarily delayed due to the elections.
The UK government intends to allow the use of stablecoins as a means of payment, provided they are pegged to the US dollar or euro. The bill also focuses on regulating staking, which has received support from the blockchain industry that seeks to accelerate the process of legalization.
The EU has already passed the MiCA law, and London is determined not to fall behind in order to maintain its status as one of the world’s leading financial centers.
The MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets) regulation is a European Union bill that governs crypto assets and related services. It aims to create a unified legal framework for the cryptocurrency markets in the EU, ensuring investor protection, preventing fraud and money laundering, and supporting innovation in the crypto industry. MiCA sets requirements for crypto issuers, service providers, and cryptocurrency wallets, as well as regulating the issuance of stablecoins and other types of assets, ensuring greater transparency and security in the market.
Additionally, according to Acryptoinvest.news: The UK government has established a blockchain analytics platform, on which billions of dollars in Bitcoin have been stored over the last few years.
Arkham Intelligence, analyzing on-chain data as of December 6, discovered a wallet linked to the UK government, holding 61,245 BTC, worth around $6 billion. This wallet has also profited from Bitcoin’s price movement, gaining over $28 million in unrealized profit.
Arkham claims that the Bitcoin held by the UK government is a confiscated asset from Ji Minjian, a fraudster who orchestrated a multi-billion-dollar scam. Nevertheless, the race to adopt cryptocurrencies among nations continues, and many aim to be at the forefront of this global shift, rather than left behind.