đ EU Crypto Lobby Fights MiCA Limits on US Dollar Stablecoins đ
The European Union could ban dollar-pegged stablecoins under its new MiCA legislation, crypto lobbyists have
Dollar-pegged stablecoins might be blocked in the European Unionâs 27 countries if the blocâs new Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) legislation enters into force in its current form.
The European Unionâs landmark crypto law has already been approved but technicalities still have to be ironed out.
Blockchain for Europe and the Digital Euro Association this weekend sent a letter to the EU Council, a collegiate body formed by EU member states, in a bid to reverse controversial rules which would effectively quash any large stablecoin projects tied to anything but the euro.
The crypto industry says MiCA imposes restrictions on the issuance and use of stablecoins which arenât denominated in euros or other official currency of an EU Member State.
This would possibly ban Tetherâs USDT, Circleâs USD coin and Binanceâs binance USD, which account for an enormous chunk of crypto trade volumes globally.
âThe three largest stablecoins by trade volume are at risk of being banned in the EU from 2024, due to quantitative limits on issuance and use of EMTs [e-money tokens] denominated in foreign currency under MiCA,â both associations argue in the letter.
âRestricting their use in the Euro area would cause crypto markets here to seize up, with potentially destabilizing effects and a major outflow of crypto activities outside of the EU.â
If MiCA is enforced as is, the groups reckon there could be âextreme short-term volatility in prices driven by dislocation effectsâ alongside higher prices and lower competition in the developing digital assets industry. The result would âdrag downâ innovation in the EU, they said.
Both associations seek clarification from the legislator, arguing any limitation on foreign currencies should be very narrow in scope.
In particular, theyâve requested precise definitions for âuses as a means of exchangeâ under MiCA to protect the role of USD-referencing stablecoins in enabling crypto trade and in liquidity provision to DeFi (decentralized finance) pools.
Patrick Hansen, EU policy expert and Crypto Venture Advisor at Presight Capital, who supports this joint letter, wrote on Twitter that providing clarity âis in the EUâs interest too, as it wants these issuers to seek a license,â which a scope too broad would disincentivize.
Stablecoins pegged to the euro wonât compete with USD-backed ones anytime soon
At the moment, European crypto investors canât rely on euro-dominated stablecoins as they account for a small share of trade volumes.
âIt is unrealistic to expect them [investors] to replace USD-referencing stablecoins in crypto trading, never mind doing so in a smooth manner by January 2024,â the associations wrote.
According to a June report published by the European Central Bank about the euroâs international role, the currencyâs share in crypto markets is âextremely small,â just 0.2%.
Euro-based stablecoins are less liquid as a result and âtend to be sold similarly to other risky assets rather than behaving like a vehicle in digital transactions and tradingâ.
Circleâs newest stablecoin issued in euros, euro coin (EUROC), launched in June, gave market players some confidence in a major euro-pegged stablecoin, even if itâs not clear when it will be commonly used.
As of now, EUROC has a market capitalization of only $76 million, according to CoinGeckoâs data, ranking it the 320th largest token. For scale, dollar-denominated USDT is the third biggest cryptocurrency by market value, boasting more than $67.5 billion.
https://blockworks.co/eu-crypto-lobby-fights-mica-limits-on-us-dollar-stablecoins/