Coşku Varlıkay

Originally published by GOV.UK on 2025-12-15

26 Mayıs 2026 · 2 dk okuma

What the UK's New Crypto Regulatory Framework Means for Investors

İngiltere hükümeti, 2027'de yürürlüğe girecek kapsamlı bir kripto varlık düzenleme çerçevesini açıkladı. İşte bu düzenlemenin yatırımcılar, platformlar ve Britanya'daki daha geniş dijital varlık ekosistemi için ne anlama geldiği.

Kripto alım satım stratejisiyle uzun vadeli kazançlara yönelik pasif gelir elde etme

In December 2025, HM Treasury announced what could be the most significant shift in UK financial regulation since the post-2008 reforms: a comprehensive regulatory framework bringing crypto asset firms under the full supervision of the Financial Conduct Authority. The move signals that the UK will no longer watch from the sidelines while other jurisdictions race to set the rules for digital finance.


What the Framework Actually Requires

At the heart of the new regime is a demand that crypto firms meet the same standards already expected of traditional financial services companies. That means proper authorization, transparent fee structures, robust custody arrangements, and clear complaints procedures. Chancellor Rachel Reeves described the legislation as "vital" to preserving the UK's position as a "world-leading financial center in the digital age" — a statement that reveals how the government views crypto regulation not as a burden on innovation, but as a precondition for institutional trust.


Why This Matters for Individual Investors

For individual investors operating in the UK market, the practical consequences are considerable. The days of navigating an unregulated environment, where platform failures could wipe out assets with no right of recourse, are numbered. When the framework takes effect in October 2027, every crypto asset firm serving UK customers will need FCA authorization — the same seal of approval required of banks, investment firms, and insurance companies.

This does not, of course, eliminate investment risk. Crypto markets will remain volatile, and no regulatory framework can guarantee returns. But it does mean that the firms facilitating these investments will face accountability: proper segregation of customer assets, mandatory disclosure of risks, and real enforcement powers when things go wrong.

Source: GOV.UK