In the Old Continent, regulation is as much a passion as a bureaucratic reflex. Here, people do not just monitor: they frame, mark out, lock down. And sometimes, those locks bear names such as MiCA or ESMA. Behind these acronyms lie increasingly strict rules on crypto, intended to protect without suffocating. But when application varies from one country to another, the entire ambition of the EU cracks.
Since January 2025, the MiCA regulation (Markets in Crypto-Assets) has officially come into force. It promised harmonization of rules for all crypto sector players within the EU. But the unity shown on paper erodes on the ground.
Germany, for example, has already granted over 30 crypto licenses, often to traditional banks. Meanwhile, Luxembourg has only approved three, solely for well-established heavyweights. This disparity fuels a risk of regulatory arbitrage: some players choose the most lenient jurisdictions, distorting competition.
Lewin Boehnke, Chief Strategy Officer at Crypto Finance Group, did not mince his words :
There is a very, very uneven application of regulation.
ESMA (European Securities and Markets Authority) recently stirred the pot by singling out Malta’s MFSA: according to an official report, the Maltese regulator only partially met expectations in issuing crypto licenses.
What was just a technical debate becomes a political question. Should each country play its part, or should the baton be handed to a single conductor? For several Member States, the choice seems made.
France, Italy, and Austria support a strengthening of ESMA’s role . The idea is not to deprive local regulators of power, but to accelerate efficiency and unify practices.
Also according to Boehnke:
From a purely practical point of view, I think it would be a good idea to have a unified application of the regulation.
But grey areas persist. MiCA, for example, requires the “immediate” return of assets held by custodians. Problem: no one knows what “immediate” means in the crypto world. This slows adoption, especially among banks. Uniform interpretation of these sensitive points therefore becomes crucial.
According to an op-ed published by GlobalCapital, national regulators must reinvent themselves. The future would no longer be in exclusive governance, but in technical support for a central authority.
A model already exists: the European Central Bank directly supervises major banks while collaborating with national regulators. This hybrid model could apply to the crypto market.
On the ground, the rise of ESMA is not seen as a competence conflict. It is viewed as an opportunity to create a single standard capable of competing with the US SEC. And with the rise of blockchains such as Solana, Avalanche, or Cosmos, clear regulation becomes essential to protect investors and make the crypto market credible.
With ESMA at the forefront, Europe no longer wants to suffer the American agenda. It attempts to impose its own vision of financial regulation in the Web3 era. And in the global crypto arena, it intends to become the sovereign alternative to the SEC model .