Book contents
- The EU Law on Cryptoassets
- The EU Law on Cryptoassets
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Setup of Cryptoasset Schemes
- 3 Cryptoasset Regulation in the System of EU Financial Law
- 4 Scope of MiCA
- 5 Prospectus Rules under MiCA and the Prospectus Regulation
- 6 Product Regulation of Stablecoins (E-money Tokens and Asset-Referenced Tokens) in Titles III and IV MiCA
- 7 Regulation of Cryptoasset Service Providers (Title V MiCA)
- 8 Crypto Custody
- 9 Crypto Investment Funds
- 10 Market Abuse and Insider Dealing Rules (Title VI MiCA)
- 11 Supervision and Supervisory Cooperation
- 12 The Pilot Regime for DLT Market Infrastructures
- 13 Private Law of Cryptoassets
- 14 AML/CTF Legislation on Cryptoassets
- 15 Cybersecurity and Digital Operational Resilience in Decentralised Finance
- 16 Remaining Regulatory Challenges in Digital Finance and Cryptoassets after MiCA
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - The Setup of Cryptoasset Schemes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2025
- The EU Law on Cryptoassets
- The EU Law on Cryptoassets
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Setup of Cryptoasset Schemes
- 3 Cryptoasset Regulation in the System of EU Financial Law
- 4 Scope of MiCA
- 5 Prospectus Rules under MiCA and the Prospectus Regulation
- 6 Product Regulation of Stablecoins (E-money Tokens and Asset-Referenced Tokens) in Titles III and IV MiCA
- 7 Regulation of Cryptoasset Service Providers (Title V MiCA)
- 8 Crypto Custody
- 9 Crypto Investment Funds
- 10 Market Abuse and Insider Dealing Rules (Title VI MiCA)
- 11 Supervision and Supervisory Cooperation
- 12 The Pilot Regime for DLT Market Infrastructures
- 13 Private Law of Cryptoassets
- 14 AML/CTF Legislation on Cryptoassets
- 15 Cybersecurity and Digital Operational Resilience in Decentralised Finance
- 16 Remaining Regulatory Challenges in Digital Finance and Cryptoassets after MiCA
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
DLT and cryptoassets are a digital solution to the perennial issue of how to establish a single source of truth. Because digital data entries can easily be altered or copied, we have relied on trusted third parties to keep a master copy of any digital asset registry – until DLT enabled digital equivalents to physical cash and bearer instruments. Instead of a trusted record keeper, DLT relies on a distributed network of nodes that each hold a copy of the ledger. The data are typically stored in a time-stamped sequence of blocks, i.e., a blockchain. Different types of consensus mechanisms exist to keep each copy of the ledger synchronised and to prevent malicious actors from altering the registered information. This technology is democratising the privilege of running a trusted asset registry, thus facilitating new business models in so-called decentralised finance (DeFi) which emulate conventional financial processes with software replacing middlemen, such as banks, depositories, and exchanges. This has resulted in so-called token offerings and more than 10,000 different cryptoassets worth more than USD 1 trillion in aggregate.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The EU Law on Crypto-AssetsA Guide to European FinTech Regulation, pp. 17 - 29Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025