UK Treasury Secretary Tulip Siddiq: Stablecoin regulations expected by 2025

November 26, 2024
UK Treasury Secretary Tulip Siddiq

Tulip Siddiq, the UK's secretary to the Treasury, now anticipates stablecoin regulations to be released the following year. Stablecoin regulations were initially scheduled for 2024.

The change in government is the reason for the delay, according to Bloomberg, and the new Labour leadership requires more time. A new "single overarching crypto regime" is anticipated to be unveiled at the same time. Last Thursday, the announcement was made during a conference in London.


Laurent Descout, co-founder and CEO of Neo, commented on the delay, noting that stablecoins are emerging as viable forms of payment for goods and services in the real economy.

“Many see the huge potential they could bring from bypassing traditional payments’ inefficient and slow processes to the increased security, recordkeeping, and transparency. While the UK has delayed the rollout of a regulatory regime for stablecoins, which will now be included in a larger plan for crypto next year, treasurers should start preparing for stablecoin adoption if they haven’t already. This means staying abreast of the latest developments, having conversations about their viability, and considering digital wallets, which allow them to hold and utilize them. Those who don’t risk being left behind.”

While stablecoins gained traction as an on/off ramp for crypto trading, the real value is as a new form of payment. Stablecoins tied to fiat and overseen by regulators can be a big improvement over current payment rails – faster and less expensive for both sides of the equation. Stablecoins can also mitigate the concerns of CBDCs, which are central bank digital currencies. While CBDCs can provide value, conventional wisdom is the government will eventually leverage a CBDC to control behavior or monitor usage. China is already talking about this. An arms-length payment and transfer ecosystem where private firms can issue digital currency makes much more sense. A few months delay in the UK is worth it if policymakers get it right. With the change in the US administration and the removal of anti-digital asset regulators, many anticipate pro-crypto rules in 2025 – something the UK is keenly aware of.