Bitcoin News Today: UK Crypto Market Reopens-But Will It Keep Up with Global Rivals?

Generado por agente de IACoin World
miércoles, 8 de octubre de 2025, 11:39 pm ET2 min de lectura
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The UK's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has lifted a four-year ban on retail access to crypto exchange-traded notes (ETNs), effective October 8, 2025, allowing investors to trade BitcoinBTC-- and Ethereum-linked products on regulated exchanges such as the London Stock Exchange (LSE) and Cboe UKtitle1[1]. The reversal follows years of regulatory hesitation that left the UK lagging behind the U.S. and EU, where spot Bitcoin ETFs and ETNs have become mainstream investment vehiclestitle1[1]. The FCA cited market maturation, strengthened infrastructure, and pent-up retail demand as key factors in its decisiontitle10[5].

The 2021 ban, imposed amid concerns over volatility and investor risk, pushed UK retail investors toward unregulated offshore platforms or leveraged treasury structurestitle1[1]. During the restriction, the EU approved crypto ETNs as early as 2021, and the U.S. greenlit spot Bitcoin ETFs in January 2024, attracting billions in inflows. UK investors missed years of regulated exposure to Bitcoin's record-breaking runs and Ethereum's institutional integrationtitle1[1]. The FCA's reversal aims to reintegrate the UK into global crypto markets while balancing innovation with consumer protectionstitle10[5].

Industry players like 21Shares, WisdomTreeWT--, and BlackRockBLK-- are preparing Bitcoin and EthereumETH-- ETNs for retail access, with analysts estimating a potential 20% increase in UK crypto participationtitle1[1]. The products qualify for tax-advantaged wrappers such as ISAs and pensions, offering gains that grow tax-freetitle2[2]. For higher-rate taxpayers, pension contributions receive 40% tax relief, creating immediate value before any investment growthtitle2[2]. This contrasts with alternatives like digital asset treasury companies, which now trade below net asset value and face scrutiny over leverage and liquidity riskstitle2[2].

The FCA's decision has drawn mixed reactions. While some celebrate it as a step toward financial innovation, critics argue it arrives too late and prioritizes symbolic progress over substantive market accesstitle1[1]. The delay allowed competitors like Frankfurt, Zurich, and New York to dominate crypto-linked products, siphoning institutional liquidity that might have flowed through UK marketstitle1[1]. Additionally, operational glitches have delayed retail access, with the LSE and FCA finalizing listing procedures. Some reports suggest delays until October 13 or latertitle5[4].

The FCA maintains restrictions on crypto derivatives for retail investors and emphasizes risk disclosures under its Consumer Duty frameworktitle10[5]. Industry leaders like Susie Violet Ward of Bitcoin Policy UK note that ETNs are debt instruments, not spot ETFs, raising questions about the choice of regulatory pathwaytitle1[1]. Despite this, the FCA's approach reflects a shift toward harm reduction, acknowledging that demand for crypto exposure would persist regardless of restrictionstitle2[2].

The UK's re-entry into regulated crypto trading coincides with global inflows to digital asset funds exceeding $50 billion in 2024title10[5]. While UK crypto ETN trading volumes remain modest at £624,000 daily, compared to €26 billion in Europe, the move aligns with Chancellor Rachel Reeves' broader crypto oversight bill, which includes stablecoin regulations and institutional frameworkstitle10[5]. Analysts suggest the UK's cautious, tailored approach may serve as a model for other jurisdictions balancing innovation with oversight.

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