France may oblige crypto platforms to obtain licenses

Published at: Dec. 15, 2022

Following the global trend of tightening the crypto regulation in the aftermath of recent market failures, France may reassess its eased regime of licensing for digital asset providers. That would challenge the nation’s efforts to present itself as one of the most pro-crypto countries in Europe. 

According to the Financial Times, Hervé Maurey, a member of the French Senate’s finance commission, proposed an amendment to eliminate a clause enabling crypto companies to operate without a full license until 2026. The current regime preserves this possibility even after the Markets in-Crypto Assets (MiCA) coming into law in 2024.

Maurey’s amendment will end the option to operate without stringent checks as it will oblige companies to obtain a license from the Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) from October 2023. In his words, the FTX collapse was a game-changer in that regard:

“This led a number of players within the French system to consider that things needed to be supervised more tightly.”

Currently, there are at least 50 registered companies that operate in France without a license from AMF. An ex-member of the AMF board, Thierry Philipponnat, considers the level of investors’ protection within this regime as “very light if not non-existent.” 

Related: French police use Crypto Twitter sleuth’s research to catch scammers

The amendment was adopted by the Senate on Dec. 13 and will head to Parliament deliberations in January 2023. The local industry’s association, Developing the French Digital Asset Industry (Adan), regards the amendment as a sign of “abandoning an industry of the future” by French lawmakers.

The government of Emmanuel Macron, who has recently started his second presidential term, is famous for its vocal support of the digital assets industry. Back in April, before the second round of the presidential election, Macron expressed his faith in the necessity of raising the number of tech unicorns in the country, developing an NFT policy and the “European metaverse.” However, he also shared his skepticism toward the self-regulated financial sector.

Tags
Related Posts
Emmanuel Macron on crypto: 'I don't believe in a self-regulated financial sector'
Mere days before the second round of the fateful presidential election in France, the incumbent president of the Republic, Emmanuel Macron, sat down with local media to share his thoughts on the digital economy — a subject on which he hasn't spoken much previously. While emphasizing the importance of the sector, Macron once again reiterated his support for the pan-European approach to financial technology regulation. The interview with French publication The Big Wale came on Friday, two days before the runoff that will see Macron face the right-wing populist Marine Le Pen. According to most polls, Macron is likely to …
Regulation / April 22, 2022
Stefan Berger explains the reason behind the delay in MiCA voting
As the Plenary vote for the landmark Pan-European crypto legislation, Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA), has been rescheduled from the end of 2022 to February 2023, Stefan Berger believes that to be a matter of technical necessity. Responding to Cointelegraph's request for more info, Berger, a member of the European Parliament responsible for procedural handling of MiCa, explained that the delay has nothing to do with the legislation’s content: “I view this as a purely technical necessity and not as a political move. I have no reason to believe that the support for the MiCA has changed in the European …
Regulation / Nov. 9, 2022
French central bank governor pushes for crypto licensing ahead of EU laws
Francois Villeroy de Galhau, the Bank of France’s governor, has urged for more stringent licensing requirements for crypto companies in France, citing the current turmoil in the crypto markets. During a speech in Paris on Jan. 5, the central bank governor said France shouldn’t wait for upcoming EU crypto laws to enact obligatory licensing for local Digital Asset Service Providers (DASPs). The European Parliaments Markets in Crypto Assets bill (MiCA) provides a licensing regime for the EU amongst other regulations and is expected to come into force potentially sometime in 2024. According to a Jan. 5 Bloomberg report, Villeroy addressed …
Regulation / Jan. 6, 2023
EU postpones final vote on MiCA for the second time in two months
The final vote on European Union’s much-awaited crypto regulations called Markets in Crypto Assets regulation (MiCA) was deferred to April 2023. This marks the second delay in the final vote, earlier deferred from November 2022 to February. The latest delay is attributed to a technical issue where the official 400-page document couldn’t be translated into the 24 official languages of the EU, reported The Block. Legal documents like the MiCA, which were drafted in English, must comply with EU regulations and be published in all 24 official languages of the union. The first delay in November that deferred the final …
Regulation / Jan. 18, 2023
War had no impact on Ukraine’s regulatory approach to crypto, Kyiv lawmaker says
A year after Russia’s invasion, Ukraine continues working on cryptocurrency legislation, but the war has not changed its regulatory stance, according to a Kyiv official. Ukraine has continued to follow in the footsteps of the European Union in regard to adopting digital asset laws, Ukraine’s securities commissioner Yurii Boiko told Cointelegraph in an interview. Boiko said that the Ukrainian lawmakers have been working to implement major European crypto regulations, known as the Markets in Crypto Assets regulation, or MiCA. “The approach to the regulation of the virtual asset market has not changed during the war,” Boiko stated, adding: “We clearly …
Adoption / Feb. 28, 2023