April 20, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Chart of the Week: ‘Dire Picture’ for BTC Miners as Revenue Flatlines Near Record Low XRP Resembles a Compressed Spring Poised for a Significant Price Move as Key Volatility Indicator Mirrors 2024 Patterns Trump’s Official Memecoin Surges Despite Massive $320 Million Unlock in Thin Holiday Trading Slovenia Moves to Tax Crypto Profits at 25% Unpacking the DOJ’s Crypto Enforcement Memo Canary Capital Files for Tron ETF With Staking Capabilities Feds Mistakenly Order Estonian HashFlare Fraudsters to Self-Deport Ahead of Sentencing CoinDesk Weekly Recap: EigenLayer, Kraken, Coinbase, AWS The Case for User-Owned AI Crypto Exchange Kraken Launches FX Perpetual Futures, Offers 24/7 Trading in Forex Majors

Crypto.com Will Suspend Tether, PayPal Stablecoin Services in Europe Due to MiCA

Digital asset exchange Crypto.com said it will suspend certain token services deemed to be unauthorized in terms of the European Union’s Markets in Crypto Assets legislation (MiCA) in a statement to its clients on Tuesday.

The statement said that from Jan. 31, it will no longer offer certain services from stablecoins, like Tether USDT, Paypal USD, Pax dollar alongside Crypto.com Staked ETH and Crypto.com Staked SOL. CoinDesk reached out to Tether, Paypal and Paxos for a comment.

Exchanges are required to follow the European Unions bespoke rules for crypto assets known as MiCA that require stablecoin issuers and staking service providers to have the necessary authorization in order to be accessed by Europeans. The rules impact all 30 nations in the European Economic Area.

β€œIn line with MiCA regulatory requirements, we will suspend the purchase of affected assets on the 31st January, 2025,” a Crypto.com spokesperson told CoinDesk.

EU regulators sent out a notice last week urging exchanges to ensure compliance with its stablecoin rules under MiCA within the next two months. The European Securities and Markets Authority urged exchanges to stop offering unauthorized stablecoin tokens to EU clients.

“Crypto.com Staked ETH and Crypto.com Staked SOL are classified as Liquid Staked Tokens (LST),” under MiCA, someone familiar with the matter said. As some LSTs may qualify as Asset Reference Tokens (ART) under MiCA regulatory definitions, Crypto.com has chosen to delist these assets, they added.

Read more: EU’s Restrictive Stablecoin Rules Take Effect Soon and Issuers Are Running Out of Time

This post was originally published on this site