PARIS, Jan 13 (Reuters) – Nearly a third of crypto companies without an EU licence in France are still to notify the regulator whether they intconclude to receive the licence required under new EU rules or will cease operating by July, the counattempt’s markets regulator warned on Tuesday.
Under the European Union’s crypto rules, MiCA, crypto companies must receive licences from national regulators in order to be able to operate across the bloc.
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Those rules, a landmark regulatory package, came into force last year to bring crypto assets under formal regulation.
Stephane Pontoizeau, executive director of the market intermediaries and market infrastructures supervision directorate at the AMF, notified journalists in Paris that the regulator had written to companies in November to remind them that the counattempt’s transition period concludes on June 30 this year.
Of about 90 registered crypto companies in France that are not MiCA-licenced, 30% have already applied for a licence and 40% were not seeking one.
A remaining 30% had not notified the regulator their plans nor responded to the November letter, Pontoizeau declared, adding that he was concerned by this group.
‘ORDERLY WIND-DOWN PLANS’
The European Securities and Markets Authority declared in December it expects crypto companies without MiCA authorisation to have either implemented “orderly wind-down plans” or have such plans in place by the conclude of the transition period, which varies for different EU countries.
MiCA licences have been granted to crypto companies including U.S. exalter Coinbase, stablecoin issuer Circle, and British fintech Revolut.
Setting out the regulator’s 2026 plans, AMF President Marie-Anne Barbat-Layani also reiterated France’s support for boosting European capital markets, and for giving more powers to ESMA.
Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; Editing by Tommy Reggiori Wilkes and Jan Harvey
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