šØ France warns unlicensed crypto firms face blacklisting and prosecution as EU's unified MiCA regulation deadline hits June 30, triggering regulatory crackdown across 27-member bloc šØ
France's financial markets regulator warned cryptocurrency companies they could face blacklisting and legal action if they fail to secure authorization to operate in the EU before the end of June, as the EU completes rollout of its landmark Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation introducing unified regulatory framework across the 27-member bloc, with crypto firms required to obtain licenses by June 30 to continue serving customers in the EU. Marie-Anne Barbat-Layani, president of France's AutoritƩ des MarchƩs Financiers (AMF), told journalists "it's becoming very, very urgent to finalise the licences applications," warning that companies continuing to target EU customers without authorization after the deadline would be added to blacklists and could face enforcement measures including prosecution. European regulators have already cautioned that firms unable to secure approval should prepare "orderly wind-down plans," while the United States has recently moved in the opposite direction by loosening crypto regulation under President Donald Trump's administration.
š Key points
š¹ June 30 hard deadline: Crypto companies must obtain licenses by June 30 to continue serving customers in the EU, with those failing to secure approval facing blacklisting and potential prosecution; France's regulator emphasized urgency of finalizing applications immediately.
š¹ MiCA unified framework: Under MiCA, crypto companies apply for licenses through regulators in individual EU member states, and once approved those licenses can be used as a "passport" allowing firms to operate throughout the bloc; the framework was agreed in 2023 to bring greater oversight and consistency to the multi-trillion-dollar crypto sector.
š¹ Enforcement crackdown threat: Companies continuing to target EU customers without authorization after the deadline would be added to blacklists and could face enforcement measures including prosecution; the warning applies to both existing unlicensed operators and those unable to obtain approval by the deadline.
š¹ Regulatory consistency concerns: Concerns have emerged over inconsistencies in how some countries are enforcing the new rules, with several regulators questioning the pace of license approvals in Malta, an issue that attracted scrutiny from the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA); France has indicated it may block licenses issued by other EU countries if it disagrees with approvals.
š¹ US regulatory divergence: The MiCA crackdown comes as the United States has recently moved in the opposite direction by loosening crypto regulation under President Donald Trump's administration; this creates divergent enforcement regimes across Atlantic affecting globally-operating firms.
š Why it matters
š¹ Exit deadline creates chaos: The compressed timeline to June 30 means firms have minimal time to navigate complex licensing requirements across 27 different member states with varying approval standards; this forces rushed applications, potential rejections, and mass market exits rather than orderly integration of compliant operators.
š¹ Regulatory fragmentation risk: France's threat to block other EU countries' licenses contradicts MiCA's "passport" principle, signaling potential balkanization of European crypto markets into national fiefdoms if regulators disagree on approval standards; this undermines the unified framework MiCA was designed to create.
š¹ Global regulatory arbitrage accelerates: As Europe tightens and US loosens crypto regulation, firms operating globally will face impossible compliance choicesāeither exit lucrative EU markets or establish separate subsidiaries optimizing for each jurisdiction, fragmenting liquidity and creating operational complexity.
š¹ Unequal enforcement burden: Larger firms with compliance resources can navigate multi-jurisdictional licensing; smaller crypto startups and platforms lack the infrastructure to manage 27 parallel applications and face effective market exit from EU despite technically compliant operations.
šÆ Bottom line: France warned unlicensed crypto firms face June 30 deadline for EU authorization or face blacklisting and prosecution under MiCA's unified regulatory framework, triggering enforcement crackdown across 27-member bloc as regulator emphasized urgent application finalization. Companies must obtain licenses through individual member states that grant "passport" rights across EU, but regulatory inconsistenciesāparticularly concern over Malta's approval paceāsignal France may block licenses it disagrees with, contradicting MiCA's unified intent. The compressed timeline combined with regulatory fragmentation risk and France's potential unilateral blocking power creates environment where compliant firms struggle with multi-state licensing while unlicensed operators face forced market exits, at same moment US moves opposite direction by loosening crypto regulation, fragmenting global enforcement and making uniform compliance impossible for international platforms.
https://www.pymnts.com/cpi-posts/france-warns-crypto-firms-of-blacklisting-risk-under-eu-licensing-rules/