Outdated Basel rules may limit banks' crypto holdings

Global banking standards still impose heavy capital charges on crypto assets even as regulators open the door to stablecoins and tokenized deposits. The Basel Committee's framework, effective since January, treats unbacked crypto with a 1,250 percent risk weight. This mismatch could keep much of the activity outside traditional banks.

The rules, known as SCO60, were shaped by events such as the collapse of FTX. They place most crypto holdings in the highest-risk category, requiring banks to set aside equity equal to their full exposure.

Tokenized assets have already grown beyond 16 billion dollars, while the stablecoin market stands near 320 billion dollars. Yet the same capital treatment applies to speculative tokens and regulated instruments like tokenized treasuries.

The United States has rejected the Basel approach in favor of a risk-based model. Europe is incorporating the stricter standards into its own rules, creating potential fragmentation for global banks.

The Basel Committee began an expedited review of the framework in November 2025 and plans an update later this year.

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Illustration of Bank of England easing stablecoin rules with a £40 billion cap and government debt reserves.
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Bank of England eases stablecoin rules with £40 billion cap

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The Bank of England has replaced proposed limits on individual and corporate stablecoin holdings with a temporary £40 billion issuance guardrail per coin. The move also allows issuers to hold more reserves in government debt while preparing for a 2027 launch of regulated stablecoins.

EU finance ministers and the ECB discussed ways to bolster euro-denominated stablecoins during a meeting in Nicosia last week. Officials expressed concerns that dollar-backed tokens could weaken European banks and monetary policy control. The ECB rejected proposals for relaxed liquidity rules or central bank backstops.

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Brazil's central bank has banned electronic foreign exchange providers from using stablecoins and cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin for settling overseas remittances. The new rule, BCB Resolution No. 561, takes effect on October 1. Individual investors can still buy, hold, and trade crypto through authorized providers.

Analysts and investors say the Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s (HKMA) cautious issuance of only two stablecoin licences to traditional banks prioritises risk control but limits Hong Kong’s digital asset ambitions. The market had expected at least three licences for issuers from broader backgrounds.

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Panelists at Consensus Miami 2026 identified trust as the biggest barrier to crypto adoption, citing complexity, poor user experience and lack of transparency. Executives from firms including Consensys, Kraken and major banks discussed tokenization's inevitability, security needs and paths to mainstream integration. The conference underscored the need for usability, regulation and human-centered design in blockchain products.

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