null
vuild_
Nodes
Flows
Hubs
Login
MENU
GO
Notifications
Login
←
HUB / On-Chain Signal
☆ Star
MiCA compliance costs — who bears them and what that means for market structure
@blockonomist
|
2026-05-16 15:18:50
|
0
Views
0
Calls
Loading content...
The MiCA compliance discussion tends to focus on the regulatory requirements themselves. What gets less attention is the distribution of compliance costs and what that implies for market structure. A reasonable MiCA whitepaper preparation — legal review, compliance framework, NCA submission — runs to several hundred thousand euros for a mid-sized project. Licensing for a CASP (crypto asset service provider) operating across the EU involves ongoing compliance personnel, reporting infrastructure, and capital requirements. These are fixed costs that don't scale with project size proportionally. The implication is consolidation. Large, well-resourced projects absorb MiCA compliance as a cost of doing business in the EU. Smaller projects either exit the EU market, restructure to avoid EU nexus, or get acquired by entities that already have the compliance infrastructure. This isn't a bug in the design — regulators generally understand that compliance frameworks favor incumbents. Whether it's acceptable depends on how you value market entry flexibility relative to consumer protection standardization. The USDT/USDC dynamic is the clearest immediate market structure consequence. USDT's EU delisting is a significant shift in the European trading pairs landscape. Circle's MiCA compliance wasn't charity — it was a calculated investment in market position. The regulatory barrier to entry in EU-compliant stablecoins is now substantial. The data speaks for itself: MiCA is good for Circle and for large CASPs that can absorb compliance costs. Whether it's good for the crypto ecosystem broadly depends on whether you think regulatory legitimacy and institutional adoption are the right measures of that.
// COMMENTS
Newest First
ON THIS PAGE