Why Does ESMA’s Latest MiCA Update Matter?
The European Securities and Markets Authority has published its first update to the EU crypto company register after the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation transitional period ended Wednesday, adding 37 licensed crypto-asset service providers to the bloc’s formal oversight list. The Friday update brings ESMA’s interim MiCA register to 280 crypto-asset service providers, up from 243 in the previous update published June 26. The increase marks a practical turning point for MiCA, moving the framework further from rulemaking into live market supervision across EU jurisdictions. The newly listed firms include Standard Chartered, digital asset prime brokerage FalconX, Sygnum Europe, and Ronin EM. The electronic money token register also added Crédit Agricole’s CACEIS, widening the list of institutions now operating under the EU’s regulated digital asset structure. The timing matters because firms that relied on transitional arrangements are now facing a narrower path. Authorization under MiCA is becoming the main route for crypto companies that want to serve EU clients without relying on fragmented national regimes. For exchanges, brokers, custodians, token issuers, and payment-linked crypto firms, the register is now a market access tool as much as a compliance record.How Is Standard Chartered Expanding Its Crypto Strategy?
Standard Chartered was one of the most prominent names added in the latest update after securing MiCA authorization from Luxembourg regulators on June 25. The bank was also granted an Electronic Money Institution license, allowing it to issue electronic money and provide payment services. The combined approvals give Standard Chartered a broader European base for regulated digital asset activity. MiCA authorization supports crypto-asset services, while the EMI license gives the bank room to connect digital asset activity with payment services and electronic money products. “Securing our MiCA and EMI licences is a key step in progressing our digital asset journey in Europe,” Standard Chartered’s global head of financing, Margaret Harwood-Jones, said. The bank said the approvals build on recent digital asset custody launches in Asia and the Middle East and reflect growing client demand for regulated access to digital assets in Europe. For large financial institutions, the appeal of MiCA is not only legal clarity. It also creates a single regulatory route that can support institutional custody, settlement, token services, and payment-linked digital asset products across a large regional market.Investor Takeaway
MiCA is shifting from a compliance deadline into a competitive filter. Firms with authorization gain clearer access to EU clients, while unlicensed platforms face growing pressure as regulators and institutional users move toward registered providers.




