Bank of England Drops Stablecoin Holding Caps but Keeps $53 Billion Issuance LimitThe Bank of England has scrapped its proposed holding caps for UK stablecoins, replacing them with a temporary £40 billion ($52.9 billion) limit on how much of any single systemic coin can be issued.
The change arrived Monday with a draft Code of Practice. It eases a rule that worried issuers. Yet it leaves Britain capping issuance of its own currency stablecoin, something neither the US nor the EU does.
From Per-User Caps to a Single Ceiling
In November 2025, the central bank proposed limiting individuals to £20,000 and businesses to £10 million per coin. Issuers called the plan costly and hard to enforce.
The reversal followed pressure at home. In June, the House of Lords Financial Services Regulation Committee urged the Bank to reconsider the limits. It warned they diverged from global norms and had alarmed crypto founders.
The Bank has now swapped those proposed holding limits for one £40 billion ceiling per coin. It says the cap shields bank lending while letting households and firms transact freely.
Why UK Stablecoin Rules Stand Alone
The contrast abroad is sharp. The US GENIUS Act, signed in July 2025, demands full cash and Treasury reserves but caps no issuance.
Europe’s MiCA stablecoin rules cap only foreign-currency coins used heavily for payments, a brake meant to defend the euro. They place no ceiling on euro stablecoins themselves.
That leaves the UK alone in capping issuance of a coin in its own currency. It is fencing a market that barely exists in sterling.
About 99% of stablecoins in circulation are dollar-denominated, the ECB reported in November.
A ceiling on supply restrains the issuer, not the user. Even that softer form of stablecoin holding caps has no parallel among big economies.
The Bigger Test is Tokenization
Issuers must back coins with 70% short-term UK government debt and 30% in deposits at the central bank. They cannot pay interest, though payment-linked rewards stay allowed.
That backing rule reaches into the gilt market. The Treasury and the Debt Management Office have flagged sterling stablecoins as possible structural demand for Treasury bills. Both plan new short-dated issuance to meet it.
Coins used mainly for trading, such as Tether (USDT) and USD Coin (USDC), stay under the Financial Conduct Authority. Redemptions must clear within 24 hours of a complete request.
The unresolved question is whether these coins can settle wholesale market trades. That answer will shape the country’s tokenization plans, and the Bank says the work continues.
“This is a major milestone in delivering greater choice and innovation in UK payments… This is truly a world leading regime,” Sarah Breeden, the Bank’s Deputy Governor for Financial Stability, said the regime builds trust for a new form of money.
Follow us on X to get the latest news as it happens
Feedback on the draft closes 22 September. The Bank aims to finalize the code by the end of 2026. That keeps the UK’s 2026 stablecoin timeline on track for the first issuers in 2027.
The supply cap lasting that long may decide if sterling stablecoins scale at home or grow elsewhere.
The post Bank of England Drops Stablecoin Holding Caps but Keeps $53 Billion Issuance Limit appeared first on BeInCrypto.
read the full story
The Bank of England has scrapped its proposed holding caps for UK stablecoins, replacing them with a temporary £40 billion ($52.9 billion) limit on how much of any single systemic coin can be issued.
The change arrived Monday with a draft Code of Practice. It eases a rule that worried issuers. Yet it leaves Britain capping issuance of its own currency stablecoin, something neither the US nor the EU does.
From Per-User Caps to a Single Ceiling
In November 2025, the central bank proposed limiting individuals to £20,000 and businesses to £10 million per coin. Issuers called the plan costly and hard to enforce.
The reversal followed pressure at home. In June, the House of Lords Financial Services Regulation Committee urged the Bank to reconsider the limits. It warned they diverged from global norms and had alarmed crypto founders.
The Bank has now swapped those proposed holding limits for one £40 billion ceiling per coin. It says the cap shields bank lending while letting households and firms transact freely.
Why UK Stablecoin Rules Stand Alone
The contrast abroad is sharp. The US GENIUS Act, signed in July 2025, demands full cash and Treasury reserves but caps no issuance.
Europe’s MiCA stablecoin rules cap only foreign-currency coins used heavily for payments, a brake meant to defend the euro. They place no ceiling on euro stablecoins themselves.
That leaves the UK alone in capping issuance of a coin in its own currency. It is fencing a market that barely exists in sterling.
About 99% of stablecoins in circulation are dollar-denominated, the ECB reported in November.
A ceiling on supply restrains the issuer, not the user. Even that softer form of stablecoin holding caps has no parallel among big economies.
The Bigger Test is Tokenization
Issuers must back coins with 70% short-term UK government debt and 30% in deposits at the central bank. They cannot pay interest, though payment-linked rewards stay allowed.
That backing rule reaches into the gilt market. The Treasury and the Debt Management Office have flagged sterling stablecoins as possible structural demand for Treasury bills. Both plan new short-dated issuance to meet it.
Coins used mainly for trading, such as Tether (USDT) and USD Coin (USDC), stay under the Financial Conduct Authority. Redemptions must clear within 24 hours of a complete request.
The unresolved question is whether these coins can settle wholesale market trades. That answer will shape the country’s tokenization plans, and the Bank says the work continues.
“This is a major milestone in delivering greater choice and innovation in UK payments… This is truly a world leading regime,” Sarah Breeden, the Bank’s Deputy Governor for Financial Stability, said the regime builds trust for a new form of money.
Follow us on X to get the latest news as it happens
Feedback on the draft closes 22 September. The Bank aims to finalize the code by the end of 2026. That keeps the UK’s 2026 stablecoin timeline on track for the first issuers in 2027.
The supply cap lasting that long may decide if sterling stablecoins scale at home or grow elsewhere.
The post Bank of England Drops Stablecoin Holding Caps but Keeps $53 Billion Issuance Limit appeared first on BeInCrypto.
read the full storyOman Launches Mandatory National Bitcoin Mining Pool In State-Backed Push
Oman has launched Omanhash.om, a mandatory national Bitcoin mining pool for licensed miners, with…
Bitcoin Clings to Crucial Support After Rebounding From Its Weakest Level Since 2024
TL;DR: Bitcoin hit its lowest level since September 2024, dropping to $58,100, before bouncing back…
Bitcoin Tests $59K as ETFs Shed $692M, Options Expiry Looms
Bitcoin fell to around $59,400 as $691 million fled spot ETFs, the most since May, ahead of Friday's…
Bitcoin Drops to $58,570, Lowest Level Since September 2024
Bitcoin fell below $60,000 this Friday, hitting $58,570 — a level not seen since September 2024.…
Tether’s USDT Flips Ether in Market Cap as Stablecoin Climbs to $186 Billion
Tether’s USDT stablecoin briefly overtook ether to become the second-largest cryptocurrency by…
Bitcoin nearly loses $58K as ETF outflows decide whether inflation relief holds
Bitcoin registered an intraday low of $58,189 on June 25 before clawing back toward $60,100 as of…
$696 Million in 24 Hours: Bitcoin ETFs Record Highest Inflow Since May
Bitcoin records highest daily outflow seen in the last month after its price dropped to a level not…
Bitcoin’s Supply-in-Loss Hits an All-Time High: Why That Might Not Mean a Bottom?
Bitcoin’s Total Supply in Loss has climbed to a record 10.7 million coins, even as a sharp…
Strategy’s Bitcoin bet sinks $12 billion underwater as STRC traders brace for more pain
Strategy’s Bitcoin holdings have fallen roughly $12 billion below their purchase cost, placing the…
Bitcoin bounces from $58,000 as derivatives signal more pain in the pipeline
BTC touched its lowest level since September 2024 before rebounding to $59,770, while ETH slipped…
Was XRP created before Bitcoin? David Schwartz responds
David Schwartz said Ryan Fugger designed a payment network before Bitcoin, but XRP and XRPL came…
Bitcoin Hits New Cycle Low After Bull Trap Plays Out, but Breakdown Is Not Over
Bitcoin extended its downward trend this week after a short-lived recovery earlier this month. Its…
Metaplanet Stock Down 88% in a Year While BTC Holdings Grow
Analysts argue that investors are effectively buying the company's Bitcoin holdings at a discount to…
Bitcoin Price Could Flash Crash to $50,000 This Weekend: Don’t Get Scared Now
Hot PCE inflation data crushed Fed rate-cut hopes, triggering $1.26B in crypto liquidations and…
Michael Saylor Reveals Why Strategy Is Not Changing Course on Bitcoin
Strategy Chairman Michael Saylor doubles down on Bitcoin despite market volatility.
Bitcoin ETFs post June's biggest daily outflows as BTC falls below $60K
US Bitcoin ETFs recorded $696.3 million in outflows as Bitcoin slipped below $60,000, lifting…