London Calling Part 2: The UK’s Journey from Roadmap to Reality
London Calling Part 2: The UK’s Journey from Roadmap to Reality Eight months ago, we wrote about the UK’s crypto journey being still largely about direction of travel. The legislative perimeter had been sketched out, regulators had published their roadmap, and the ambition to become a global hub for digital assets was firmly back in the political vocabulary. The framework was coming, but for firms on the ground, it still felt a step removed from current reality. That is no longer the case. Since then, the UK has moved from strategy to execution at a pace that is difficult to ignore. The government has now laidthe statutory instrument that brings cryptoasset activities formally into the financial services regime, creating new regulated activities from trading platforms to stablecoin issuance and giving the FCA the legal foundations for a full rulebook. At the same time, the FCA has finalised a core package of consultations covering market structure, admissions and disclosures, market abuse, and a dedicated prudential regime - the operating manual for the future UK crypto market. Add to that the Bank of England’s systemic stablecoin proposals, a new stablecoin-focused regulatory sandbox and sprint, the confirmation of the authorisations gateway timeline, and even primary legislation clarifying that digital assets can attract property rights, the picture becomes clear: the UK is no longer designing a regime in theory. It is building one in real time. Authorisations Approaching The new regime will take effect on October 25, 2027. From 30 September 2026, firms will be able to apply for licences, with a five-month window in which early applicants gain the significant advantage of being able to continue operating while their applications are assessed (even after commencement). But there will be no automatic transition. Every firm, regardless of its current status, will need to pass through the gateway if it wishes to conduct regulated business in the UK. The shift from the MLR framework to FSMA authorisation changes the evidential threshold at the gateway. Applications will need to set out not only what the firm intends to do, but how its governance, risk management, capital planning and operational arrangements will meet the relevant Handbook standards by go-live. Early engagement through the FCA’s specialist crypto authorisations teams and the pre-application support service should help firms interpret those expectations, but authorisation will depend on the credibility and completeness of the proposed operating model not just the timing of the application. For the market, this is the moment when regulatory policy becomes a commercial timetable. From Speed to Calibration For years, the standard critique of the UK was that it was moving too slowly. But that argument no longer passes muster. Few major jurisdictions have attempted to deliver, in parallel, a full conduct regime, a market-structure framework, a prudential rulebook, a systemic stablecoin model, an authorisation gateway and a legislative perimeter, all on a clearly sequenced and short timeline. The UK is now doing exactly that. The question has therefore changed. It is no longer whether the UK can move fast enough. It is whether the regime, once complete, will be calibrated well enough to compete. At Avalanche Policy Coalition, we hope that the calibration will properly take into account a workable token classification system that differentiates financial instruments from other types of assets so that the regulatory perimeter is correctly scoped, as well as preserve the distinction between infrastructure and intermediation. Developers, validators, node operators, and open-source contributors, among others, who do not custody assets or exercise unilateral discretion should not be treated as financial intermediaries. Protecting infrastructure neutrality will support innovation without weakening consumer protection. The Coherence and Competitiveness Challenge The UK’s great structural advantage has always been its integrated regulatory architecture. With HM Treasury setting the perimeter and the FCA and Bank of England dividing responsibilities along clear conduct and financial-stability lines, the system is far less fragmented than in jurisdictions where multiple federal and state authorities overlap. That should make it easier to deliver a single, coherent framework. But coherence is not automatic. It has to be designed. Firms are now looking at how the layers fit together in practice: how the FCA’s stablecoin rules interact with the Bank’s systemic regime, particularly as firms consider the transition from an FCA-only framework to dual supervision once systemic thresholds are reached; how prudential requirements align with conduct expectations; and how market-abuse, disclosure and trading-platform rules operate as a unified whole rather than as separate compliance exercises. This is not an academic question. Global firms do not build to individual consultations; they build to the overall regime. That determines where they locate trading infrastructure, where they base senior management, where they deploy capital and where new products are launched first. If the cumulative effect is predictable and proportionate, capital and talent will follow, and the UK will continue to be a competitive force around the world. Birdseye View The UK has reached the point where it can no longer be described as a jurisdiction “planning” its crypto regime. It is implementing it, on a defined timeline, with a full licensing process in sight. That is a significant achievement and one that only a small number of global financial centres have matched. The question is no longer one of speed or first mover advantage. It is about identifying the right risks and calibrating them appropriately, allowing firms to operationalise with confidence. The UK is at a crossroads. If the final framework is as coherent and proportionate, the UK has a genuine opportunity to translate regulatory progress into market leadership. Coherence requires not only institutional alignment, but clarity that different asset types and activities are appropriately regulated (or not). That is what will attract firms who are not simply looking for certainty, but for a regime within which they can scale. Otherwise, the UK will struggle to convert historical and structural advantage into long-term competitive advantage.