The European Union is set to establish a centralized regulatory authority, inspired by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), to supervise both stock and cryptocurrency exchanges throughout its member countries. This initiative marks a move toward more rigorous regulation of digital assets within the EU. The decision follows a notable increase in crypto trading activity and a growing number of firms obtaining licenses under the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation, which seeks to standardize rules across the bloc.
Recent milestones have underscored the EU’s regulatory momentum. Swiss digital asset bank AMINA became the first to secure a MiCA-compliant license in Austria, granting it the ability to provide services like staking, asset custody, and portfolio management to professional clients. Likewise,
The planned SEC-like regulator in the EU is anticipated to unify oversight of both conventional stock exchanges and digital asset platforms, addressing regulatory gaps that have arisen with the expansion of crypto trading. Under MiCA, which became fully effective at the end of 2024, companies must be licensed by July 2026 to continue their operations. Failure to comply could lead to penalties surpassing €1.2 billion ($1.4 billion) this year, according to TradingView. Additionally, MiCA-compliant exchanges are expected to surpass $2.3 trillion in trading volume in 2025, representing a 40% rise from the previous year, the report noted.
Draft legislation may soon grant the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) powers similar to those of the U.S. SEC, strengthening its capacity to oversee cross-border activities and enforce regulatory standards, TradingView reported. This development aligns with increasing demands from regulators like Austria’s Financial Market Authority (FMA) and France’s AMF for more robust oversight, reflecting ongoing concerns about market stability and investor safeguards, as detailed by crypto.news.
Industry participants see the EU’s regulatory transformation as both an opportunity and a challenge. While tighter regulations could limit speculative behavior, they also position Europe as a leader in institutional-grade crypto offerings. AMINA’s CEO remarked that the FMA’s stringent requirements demonstrate the sector’s growing maturity, according to crypto.news, and Zerohash’s CEO pointed to the MiCA framework’s advantage of enabling firms to “integrate once and scale across borders.”
As the EU strengthens its regulatory framework, the new SEC-style authority could further enhance investor trust and draw institutional investment. Still, some warn that excessive regulation could hinder innovation—a concern voiced by AMINA’s CEO, who stressed the importance of balancing oversight with the flexibility needed for technological progress, as reported by crypto.news.