
BoE rethinks stablecoin limits after industry pushback
Bank of England is reconsidering parts of its proposed stablecoin regulatory framework after criticism from digital asset firms that the rules were too restrictive for the industry.
Deputy Governor Sarah Breeden told the Financial Times the central bank was reviewing whether there were “different ways” to manage risks linked to stablecoins as adoption expands.
The Bank of England had previously proposed limiting individual holdings of UK sterling-based stablecoins to 20,000 pounds per token and capping business ownership at 10 million pounds.
“We are genuinely open to thinking whether there are other ways of achieving our objective,”
Breeden said in comments reported by the Financial Times.
The central bank is also reconsidering a proposal requiring at least 40% of stablecoin reserve assets to remain on deposit at the Bank of England without earning interest, a rule industry groups argued would make UK stablecoin businesses less profitable than competitors in the United States.
Breeden said the reserve requirement was originally based on liquidity stress scenarios observed during the 2023 collapse of Silicon Valley Bank but acknowledged regulators may have been “overly conservative” in their approach.
The review comes as the United Kingdom faces pressure to remain competitive in digital assets and stablecoin innovation, with sterling-based stablecoins accounting for less than 0.5% of the global stablecoin market valued at more than $320 billion.