ESMA Rolls Out Second Consultative Paper on MiCA
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Europe’s premier market regulator, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), has released its second consultative paper regarding cryptocurrencies.
Five Key Areas Considered for MiCA Regulation
In an October 5 release, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) introduced its second set of consultations on Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) to the world.
🟣The second consultation package under the Markets in #CryptoAssets Regulation (#MiCA) is out → https://t.co/0HbsPrLFps.
🔎 #ESMA seeks input on five sets of proposed rules.
⏳ Send your comments by 14 December. pic.twitter.com/zD3pVtNOcf— ESMA – EU Securities Markets Regulator 🇪🇺 (@ESMAComms) October 5, 2023
According to the 307-page document, ESMA is seeking feedback across five distinct proposed rules regarding MiCA.
These areas include sustainability indicators for distributed ledgers, disclosures of inside information, technical requirements for white papers, trade transparency measures, and record-keeping and business continuity requirements for crypto asset service providers (CASPs).
· sustainability indicators for distributed ledgers
· inside information disclosures
· white papers requirements
· trade transparency measures
· record-keeping & business continuity requirements for #cryptoasset providers👉 https://t.co/0HbsPrLFps pic.twitter.com/X8NhGmkG0S
— ESMA – EU Securities Markets Regulator 🇪🇺 (@ESMAComms) October 5, 2023
Regarding sustainability indicators, ESMA wants feedback on the quantitative energy use in crypto transactions, the carbon footprint generated, renewable energy, natural resources, and waste production.
Concerning the disclosure of inside information, the European market regulator stipulated that all crypto-related businesses must uniformly divulge relevant inside information to the public.
This is aimed at curbing market abuse and fostering confidence in the crypto asset marketplace.
The regulator stated that these businesses must enable fast access and a complete, correct, and timely assessment of the information by the public.
The disclosed information will be publicly accessible on their website for a period of five years.
However, it didn’t stop there and spoke on the need for transparency in trading practices across the board.
According to ESMA, all crypto asset service providers (CASPs) are mandated to report trading information like the digital asset that is traded, time, pricing information, amount, platform the trade is executed through, as well as the transaction ID.
Record-keeping is also touched on, but the markets regulator gives an open check on this.
However, it mandates that CASPs must store information in a format that can be converted to the one it might need from them.
This way, there will be easy accessibility by authorities to enhance tracking and monitoring of activities in the emerging marketplace.
For this set of consultations, stakeholders have until December 14, 2023, to send in their responses.
After the stated date, ESMA will commence working on its third consultative package scheduled for publication in the first quarter of 2024.
Subsequently, ESMA will prepare a final report, to be submitted to the European Commission on June 30, 2024, for further deliberation and potential legislation.
MiCA Creating Legal Certainty
ESMA published its first consultative paperback in July and sought feedback on how CASPs should handle complaints and conflicts of interest management.
The European Banking Authority (EBA) also chipped in and added technical draft templates for ARTs (or asset-referenced tokens), including application templates, complaint handling, or the assessment of qualified holders of ARTs.
The initiative was roundly applauded when it was announced in July, and many people said it provided much-needed legal certainty the emerging industry has been lacking for years.
Moreso, MiCA is viewed as a template that will aid innovation in blockchain and a viable means for the policy to attract the right talents into the European landscape.
🇪🇺 Yesterday, both the ESMA (European Securities and Markets Authority) and the EBA (European Banking Authority) proposed their first round of MiCA standards and published public consultations to seek feedback from the industry.
Why is this important?
We have all long pointed…
— Patrick Hansen (@paddi_hansen) July 13, 2023
While the European Union (EU) has taken the discourse route, its counterpart in the North American region has plied the regulation route by enforcement.
In the United States, the lack of regulatory clarity has forced several crypto-facing businesses and infrastructure to seek safety elsewhere.
Regulatory bodies like the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) have added top trading platforms like Binance, Coinbase, and several others to its black book, citing the violation of securities laws and providing access to unregistered financial products.
The affected platforms have called for a proper regulatory framework in the region, but a solution is still out of sight.