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European Commission says MiCA rules already tackle stablecoin risks

The European Commission said on Friday that the EU’s landmark crypto regulation, MiCA, already provides a robust framework to handle risks linked to stablecoins, pushing back against the European Central Bank’s call for stricter safeguards.

Stablecoins—digital tokens tied to fiat currencies like the U.S. dollar or euro—have grown rapidly in recent years, prompting debate over how they should be regulated. While the United States has moved to promote their use, the ECB has warned that some models could threaten financial stability.

At the center of the dispute is whether multinational stablecoin issuers can treat tokens created inside and outside the EU as interchangeable under MiCA’s “multi-issuance” model. In a letter to EU Commissioner Maria Luis Albuquerque this week, six crypto trade groups, including Circle, urged Brussels to clarify that such structures are allowed.

A Commission spokesperson told Reuters that MiCA already provides “a proportionate framework for addressing risks” and said guidance confirming how multi-issuance operates will be published “as soon as possible.”

The ECB’s Systemic Risk Board, chaired by Christine Lagarde, argues that cross-border token issuance could lead to runs on EU reserves if holders outside the bloc attempt to redeem with EU entities during market stress. Stablecoin issuers, however, maintain that adequate reserve management can prevent such instability.

Analysts at J.P. Morgan said this week that 99% of all stablecoins are pegged to the U.S. dollar, noting that the sector’s global expansion could further boost demand for the greenback.

EU Risk Watchdog Urges Swift Action on Stablecoin Safeguards

The European Union’s financial risk watchdog has called for urgent safeguards on stablecoins that are only partially issued within the bloc, echoing growing concerns from the European Central Bank (ECB) about the potential for destabilizing financial runs.

Stablecoins — cryptocurrencies pegged to traditional reserve assets such as fiat currencies or commodities — are designed to maintain price stability. However, the European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB) warned that stablecoins issued both inside and outside the EU present inherent structural risks.

“Third-country multi-issuer schemes — with fungible stablecoins circulating both in the EU and abroad — have built-in vulnerabilities which require an urgent policy response,” the ESRB said in a statement.

RISK OF RUNS AND LIQUIDITY STRAINS

The ECB, led by Christine Lagarde, fears that if confidence in such stablecoins falters, investors could rush to redeem their holdings in the EU, where regulatory protections are strongest.
Such a scenario could lead to liquidity shortages, as EU-based reserves may be insufficient to cover redemptions — potentially forcing the ECB to intervene to stabilize markets.

Lagarde has consistently emphasized that stablecoin issuers operating in the EU and abroad must be held to identical standards, to prevent regulatory loopholes that could import external financial risk into the bloc.

REGULATORY GAPS AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS

Under the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation — one of the world’s most comprehensive crypto frameworks — stablecoins are required to be fully backed by liquid reserves.
However, in “multi-issuer” arrangements, where an EU entity and a non-EU entity jointly issue a stablecoin, the stricter EU rules do not apply to the foreign partner. This creates regulatory asymmetry that may allow risk to flow into the EU system.

The ESRB warned that multi-function financial groups issuing stablecoins across jurisdictions may fall under more lenient regimes than traditional financial conglomerates, heightening the risk of divergent prudential standards and undermining the integrity of EU financial supervision.

A CALL FOR COORDINATED OVERSIGHT

The watchdog urged EU institutions to close these gaps quickly through policy coordination and international cooperation to ensure that global stablecoin systems do not exploit differences between regulatory frameworks.

The ESRB’s statement comes as the European Union prepares to implement MiCA fully by 2026, amid growing debate about how to integrate emerging crypto technologies into the region’s financial stability architecture without stifling innovation.

EU finance ministers agree on roadmap for digital euro launch

European Union finance ministers reached a compromise agreement on Friday outlining the roadmap for a digital euro, a central bank–backed electronic currency designed to reduce Europe’s reliance on U.S.-dominated payment systems like Visa and Mastercard.

At a meeting in Copenhagen with ECB President Christine Lagarde and European Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis, ministers agreed that before the European Central Bank makes a final decision on issuance, the Council of Ministers will have the right to weigh in, including on the crucial issue of holding limits—caps on how many digital euros individuals can store to prevent destabilizing bank deposits.

“The compromise that we reached is that before the ECB makes a final decision in relation to issuance… there would be an opportunity for a discussion in the Council of Ministers,” said Paschal Donohoe, chair of the finance ministers’ group.

The ECB has pitched the digital euro as both a strategic sovereignty project and a response to the rise of U.S. stablecoins promoted under President Trump’s administration. Lagarde framed it as “not just a means of payment, but also a political statement” about Europe’s ability to control its own cross-border financial infrastructure.

Still, the project faces hurdles. Legislation proposed in June 2023 has yet to be approved by the European Parliament or the European Council, with critics warning about costs, privacy concerns, and risks to bank funding. The Council aims to conclude its work by year-end, while the ECB hopes legislation will be finalized by June 2025. If approved, the digital euro could launch within three years.

For now, the compromise marks a step forward for a project that could reshape Europe’s financial system and reduce dependence on non-EU providers.