Close Menu
  • Home
  • Crypto News
    • Bitcoin
    • NFT News
  • Metaverse
  • Defi
  • Blockchain
  • Regulations
  • Trading

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Ethereum Price Just Hit a Level It First Touched 5 Years Ago: Is This the Bottom or the Beginning of More Pain?

April 27, 2026

Cardano Is Coiling Beneath a Key Trendline as Short Positions Rise: Is a Breakdown or Breakout Coming?

April 27, 2026

XRP Price Prediction: Ripple Conspiracy Theories and Broken NDAs

April 26, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
CredBit.com
  • Home
  • Crypto News
    • Bitcoin
    • NFT News
  • Metaverse
  • Defi
  • Blockchain
  • Regulations
  • Trading
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
CredBit.com
Home » Circle, Ripple and other crypto giants came to Paris for ‘regulatory clarity’ and returned with reality check – DL News
Regulations

Circle, Ripple and other crypto giants came to Paris for ‘regulatory clarity’ and returned with reality check – DL News

April 16, 20246 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit VKontakte
Circle, Ripple and other crypto giants came to Paris for ‘regulatory clarity’ and returned with reality check – DL News
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email

Paris Blockchain Week Roundup

  • The vibe in Paris last week was a mix of relief and uncertainty as crypto regime takes shape.
  • The EU may not be as crypto friendly as Americans expect.
  • The SEC’s move on Uniswap was the talk of the conference last week.

Last Wednesday morning, Verena Ross, the executive director of the European Securities and Markets Authority, delivered a reality check to hundreds of crypto industry partisans attending Paris Blockchain Week.

They were keen learn more about the European Union’s famous “regulatory clarity” around crypto. It was such a welcome contrast to the crackdown pursued by US regulators.

Yet Ross said MiCA — or Markets in Crypto Assets regulation — was no panacea for crypto ventures and she took issue with the notion that the EU was crypto-friendly.

“I’m not sure I would necessarily use the word friendly,” she told the 200 or so attendees.

Stay ahead of the game with our weekly newsletters

“What we’ve done in Europe is the legislators have created a genuine regulatory framework specifically for crypto. That replaces what was a bit of a patchwork of different national approaches.”

For many US crypto heads chafing under a regulatory crackdown back home, that sounded just fine.

A heady market

For four days last week, 10,000 or so devs, investors, media types, and assorted C-level bosses convened in the French capital to gather insights and network.

Held in the Louvre’s subterranean conference centre, attendees heard from Binance CEO Richard Teng, Ripple head Brad Garlinghouse, and Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire.

Join the community to get our latest stories and updates

BInance CEO Richard Teng (left) was reluctant to elaborate on the exchange’s crisis in Nigeria during an interview at Paris Blockchain Week. Photocredit: Paris Blockchain Week

While Bitcoin ETFs and a heady market were very much top of mind, so too were the realities of operating in an increasingly regulated world.

France, of all nations, has been doing its utmost to present itself as an antidote to such anxieties. With tax breaks and investment incentives, French officials have welcomed crypto ventures.

“We had no other choice to make in Europe but France,” said Dante Disparte, Circle’s chief strategy officer and global and head of policy, during a panel at the stablecoin issuer’s event.

“Of course, not only the opportunities in the country, the depth of the capital markets, the depth of talent, the technology base, and, candidly, the regulatory clarity.”

But ESMA’s Ross struck a sober note. “The key clearly, and that’s a call for everyone here, is be prepared,” she said.

“Don’t underestimate that there will be a new regime and therefore that you do need to be able to comply with that.”

Betting big on France

Even so, Allaire and Circle, the issuer of the $32 billion USDC stablecoin, are betting big on France.

In 2023, Circle obtained a conditional registration as a digital virtual asset provider in France and set up its European base in Paris.

It also hired Coralie Billmann, a one-time payments exec at PayPal’s Luxembourg office and at JPMorgan Chase in Paris, to spearhead the operation.

In May, French President Emmanuel Macron invited 200 business leaders, including Disparte, to Versailles.

With MiCA coming into force by the end of the year, national regulators in the EU’s 27 member nations are busy formulating regulations to complement the landmark regime.

The linchpin of the regime is ensuring crypto ventures all get registered and licenced so investors are protected from the predatory practices that are running rampant in other markets such as Asia.

Passporting

For crypto businesses such as Circle, the practice of “passporting” will be crucial because it will enable them to offer their services to customers across the bloc from one locale.

“We have set up an office and infrastructure so that we can issue our coins out of France,” Billman said last Monday. “We want Europe and France to be a privileged market for our company.”

Austin Federer, head of strategy at Solana Foundation, and Dante Disparte, head of policy and CSO of Circle.

Austin Federer (left), head of strategy at Solana Foundation, talks with Dante Disparte, head of policy and CSO of Circle. Photocredit: Liam Kelly/ DL News

Inside a former vault once used by the Bank of France, Allaire took the stage in the Pavillon Vendôme last week to promote Circle’s euro-backed stablecoin, EURC, and sketch out his strategic plan.

“Today, blockchain technologies, web three, digital assets, are becoming major national priorities all around the world,” Allaire said.

“It’s a priority for the French government. It’s a priority for the Japanese government. It’s a priority for the Hong Kong government.”

To make his point, he presented one of his favourite crypto diagrams: A smaller circle inside of a larger circle.

Jeremy Allaire, CEO and Founder of Circle.

Jeremy Allaire, CEO and Founder of Circle, talks about the growth cycle in stablecoins. Photocredit: Liam Kelly/ DL News

The smaller circle represents the value of stablecoins today — some $142 billion — and the larger circle represents the non-crypto version of electronic cash worldwide, more than $21 trillion.

Allaire’s point: Stablecoins are capable of growing by more than 850 times.

And Circle, which is mulling an IPO this year, is going to be invaluable for clients and investors.

Why? Because Circle follows the rules, says Allaire. And in France, that means MiCA.

“USDC and we expect, under MiCA, EURC are going to play really critical roles in how digital cash moves in and out of all of these different capital market structures,” he said.

“That’s where the growth is going to come from.”

Some US crypto execs at Paris Blockchain Week repeated the oft-said idea that the EU will pull crypto activity away from the US.

“We’re seeing the US almost cede leadership in what is a transformational technology,” Eric van Miltenburg, Ripple’s senior vice president of strategy, told DL News.

Brad Garlinghouse, CEO of Ripple.

Brad Garlinghouse, CEO of Ripple. Brad Garlinghouse of Ripple (left) makes a point at Paris Blockchain Week 2024, | copyright: Robert Tjalondo | www.rockinpictures.com | chainofevents

On Wednesday, news broke that the SEC notified Uniswap, a decentralised exchange, it was probably going to be sued for violating US securities laws.

Back in Paris, there were other concerns, notably getting on the guest list for the best side events.

Red carpet

That evening, conference attendees flooded Faust, a chic cocktail bar on the banks of the Seine. The Solana Foundation, a data provider called Pyth, and the buzzy memecoin Bonk were hosting a reception.

Alice in Wonderland’s card guards lined the red carpet leading into the bar. Inside, a white rabbit statue looked over partygoers. In the back, a court jester ushered others into a hidden speakeasy.

Behind the venue’s long bar stood a massive, red-and-white house of cards sculpture. Next to it, bright orange, red, and white lights shone the Bonk logo.

Hardly anyone seemed phased by the SEC’s move on DeFi’s $7 billion trading platform. Uniswap Labs is, after all, based some 6,000 kilometres from Paris. Far from bearish crackdowns and enforcement actions.

Instead, the vibe is far more optimistic. On the subject of Circle’s potential IPO bid this year, one Circle employee had just one regret.

“I wish I had more equity,” they told DL News.

Liam Kelly is DL News’ Berlin correspondent. Contact him at liam@dlnews.com.

Credit: Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit VKontakte Telegram WhatsApp

Related Posts

SEC became a defendant in the NFT classification lawsuit

July 30, 2024

The SEC Modifies its Complaint Against Binance! Is Solana in Danger?

July 30, 2024

Inside Caitlin Long’s never-say-die bid to beat the Fed on crypto banking – DL News

July 30, 2024

Future of cryptocurrency: US surge and India’s struggle

July 30, 2024

Crypto ‘is going to go mainstream’

July 29, 2024

US-listed crypto stocks jump after Trump’s pro-bitcoin speech — TradingView News

July 29, 2024

Comments are closed.

Editors Picks

Ethereum Price Just Hit a Level It First Touched 5 Years Ago: Is This the Bottom or the Beginning of More Pain?

April 27, 2026

Cardano Is Coiling Beneath a Key Trendline as Short Positions Rise: Is a Breakdown or Breakout Coming?

April 27, 2026

XRP Price Prediction: Ripple Conspiracy Theories and Broken NDAs

April 26, 2026

XRP NEWS: GraniteShares Just Delayed Its 3x XRP ETF for the Fifth Time: Is the SEC Blocking Leveraged Crypto Products?

April 26, 2026
© 2026 - credbit.com - All Rights Reserved!
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.