The EU institutions are finalising their
trilogue discussions on a major legislative text for European digital markets:
the EU Proposal for a Regulation on ‘Markets in Crypto-assets’ (better known as
the ‘MiCA’ Regulation). Stéphane Blemus agreed to answer questions from Sciences
Po’s Digital, Governance & Sovereignty Chair.
What are the objectives of the adoption of the
MiCA Regulation?
Several EU Member States have already
implemented national regulations dedicated to crypto-assets, these new types of
assets issued on distributed ledgers (or ‘blockchains’). In 2019, France adopted
the ‘PACTE’ law, enacting a regulatory
framework for public offerings of tokens on distributed ledgers and the activities
of digital asset service providers (‘DASP’). In parallel, a new
licensing regime was created in Germany in 2020, which is specific to
the crypto-asset custody service. The main limitations of these various
national laws are related to their field of application, which is confined to
the territory of the relevant country; to regulatory fragmentation within the
European Union; and to the absence of a European ‘passporting’ process for the
provision of regulated services on crypto-assets across the EU countries.
Since 2019, the European
institutions have identified the need to establish common standards at EU level. In
that respect, the MiCA Regulation is a major pillar of the EU’s digital
finance strategy, unveiled by the European Commission in September
2020.
What are the main provisions of the MiCA Regulation?
The MiCA Regulation will create a new harmonised
legal framework at EU level for many types of crypto-assets that are not already
covered by EU law (i.e. those that do not qualify
as financial instruments, electronic money, deposits, structured deposits or
securitisation under existing law).
The main components of the MiCA Regulation are
the following:
- A taxonomy
of definitions of different types of crypto-assets (including utility tokens
and certain types of ‘stablecoins’);
- A legal regime
dedicated to the public offering of various types of crypto-assets (with the
exception of financial or monetary assets already covered by EU law);
- An authorisation
process specific to public offerings of ‘stablecoins’ (i.e. crypto-assets whose
function is to maintain a stable value) referencing one or several other assets;
- A legal
regime specific to a new type of regulated entities: crypto-asset service
providers (‘CASP’).
For public offerings of crypto-assets in the EU, the main contribution
of the MiCA Regulation is to provide for a mandatory, harmonised and uniform
authorisation regime throughout the European Union. The adoption of MiCA by
means of a regulation and not a directive, unlike other EU financial
regulations in the past (for payment services, e-money, etc.), makes it
possible to minimise the risks of ‘forum shopping’ between the European Union
member states and to facilitate the emergence of major regional players.
For service providers willing to provide certain types of services related
to crypto-assets in the EU (placing, custody, exchange, etc.), the MiCA
Regulation should provide legal certainty, allowing them to better define their
business offer, strengthen their relationships with EU regulators and
potentially facilitate their discussions with various economic partners
(payment institutions, banks, insurers, brokers, asset managers, institutional
investors, etc.).
What are the main issues still under debate around the MiCA Regulation?
The MiCA Regulation seeks to combine innovation (technological,
entrepreneurial, financial) with protection (of investors, market integrity,
and financial stability). Defining such a balanced and pragmatic approach in
this Regulation is as essential as it is difficult.
Although this Regulation potentially represents a leap forward for the
creation (and strengthening) of major players in the European crypto-asset
markets, real challenges have emerged and will have to be clarified through the
‘trilogue’ of EU institutions (EU Commission, Council and Parliament).
- The
regulation of ‘stablecoins’ referencing other assets: the discussions on the subject have been tainted
by the implications of the (posthumous) ‘Libra/Diem’ consortium project led by Facebook
(now Meta). It appears necessary to regulate the particular risks to financial
stability, investor protection and monetary sovereignty linked to these assets used
to stabilize the exchange of value on crypto-asset markets, but the EU cannot
restrict itself to a purely defensive approach. The European Central Bank and
the national central banks have already produced various in-depth experiments
and analyses on a potential ‘digital euro’, and the EU private sector is
assessing the feasibility of future payment services based on central bank
digital currencies (CBDCs) and different types of ‘stablecoins’ (e-money
tokens, commercial bank money in tokenised form, ‘algorithmic stablecoins’,
etc.). A global strategic vision has to be drafted at EU level to bring
together these analyses without clichés, foster cooperation between public,
private and academic institutions, and establish guidelines for future digital payment
service offerings in France and in the EU.
- The
regulation of ‘NFTs’ (‘Non-fungible tokens’): The sudden trend for NFT markets has challenged European public
institutions, creating a risk that they regulate these new markets too quickly
and ineffectively by essentialising them in a catch-all category. Many market
players and associations in the French blockchain ecosystem (Ledger, Coinhouse,
ADAN market association, etc.) have criticised the EU Parliament’s proposal to
include ‘NFTs’ within MiCA’s scope of application. These proposals seem to
imply in particular the assimilation of various types of ‘NFTs’ to financial
instruments (recital number 8a of the compromise text adopted by the European
Parliament). These industry stakeholders have pointed out that certain criteria seem to diverge from the
EU ‘MiFID’ securities regulation currently in force. They also note that any ‘NFT’
that can be exchanged without the prior consent of its issuer is already
included in the scope of the MiCA Regulation. In order to understand these new
digital assets, it is important to favour substance over form and to align the
regulatory regime as much as possible with the regimes applying to their respective
underlying assets, which are extremely diverse. The EU Council and Commission
seem to oppose the inclusion of ‘NFTs’ (and decentralised finance, or ‘DeFi’,
more generally) in the MiCA Regulation’s scope of application. Nevertheless, it
is possible that crypto-asset service providers may be subject to new
regulatory requirements for NFT-based services.
- Technological
neutrality: The compromise
text that was submitted to the European Parliament on March 14 2022 proposed a de
facto ban on blockchain protocols using the validation system known as ‘Proof-of-Work’,
which is for example the case for Bitcoin. The proposal required that an
environmental sustainability deployment plan be put in place for crypto-assets issued,
offered or admitted to trading in the EU before or after the entry into force
of the MiCA Regulation. This requirement would have been impossible for certain
types of blockchains, starting with the Bitcoin protocol, which operates in an
automated manner without a control authority. If adopted in the MiCA Regulation,
this proposal would effectively have banned any regulated Bitcoin-related
service within the EU. That would have gone too far. In the end, this proposal was
not adopted by the EU Parliament, but was replaced by references to the
compliance of crypto-asset mining with the EU sustainable finance taxonomy. Given
that the EU sustainable finance taxonomy was not created for that purpose, the
trilogue discussions may replace these references with strengthened requirements
to investors on sustainability matters in public offerings for crypto-assets. Distributed
ledger technologies are still relatively immature. It is still impossible to
identify the technology(ies) that will become the standards of tomorrow, or to
predict the evolution of ‘blockchain’ protocols. Prohibiting or limiting the
use of a technology or a mode of technological validation (in particular ‘Proof-of-Work’)
cannot seriously be envisaged at the present time by EU institutions. When it
comes to the choice between technologies (‘Proof-of-Work’, ‘Proof-of-Stake’,
etc.) or business models (‘Decentralised Autonomous Organization’, ‘Decentralised
Finance’), European regulators must adopt an iterative approach, which makes it
possible to experiment and study the impacts of new technologies while minimising
risks for citizens and businesses.
For these many reasons, the work of the informal ‘trilogue’ meetings in Q2-Q3 2022, during which the final text of the MiCA Regulation will be agreed, will be crucial. The timeframe for a political agreement on a final text by EU institutions is still unclear, yet French public institutions – notably the Treasury – are doing their best to finalise it by the end of the French EU Council presidency EU – i.e. the end of June 2022. The digital asset industry is now at a crossroads in Europe, and the MiCA Regulation may or may not be the lever of their ambitions.
Stéphane Blemus is Secretary-General of Société Générale-Forge, doctor of law from the Paris 1 Sorbonne University, and postdoctoral researcher at the Faculty of Law of the University of Copenhagen (Denmark).