Key Insights:
- ECB supports shifting crypto regulation to ESMA for unified EU oversight.
- Proposal marks biggest change since MiCA, targeting cross-border firms.
- Rate-cut expectations rise as eurozone growth weakens and inflation stays low.
The European Central Bank (ECB) is taking a major step towards crypto regulation as the market braces for the first interest rate cut in 2026. As per the latest reports, the ECB is backing plans to shift crypto regulatory oversight to the European Securities and Markets Authority.
EU Moves Toward Unified Crypto Regulation
The European Union is reportedly making efforts to introduce a unified framework for crypto regulation to ensure consistency and transparency. As part of the initiative, the EU Commission plans to move crypto supervision to the European Securities and Markets Authority in Paris.
This move gains backing from the European Central Bank. The financial institution stated that it “fully supports” the proposal.
Notably, the proposed initiative seeks to establish a uniform regulatory framework throughout the EU. With this move, crypto firms would be able to conduct business freely across countries without worrying about differing regulations in each member state.
Nonetheless, according to the European Central Bank (ECB), ESMA needs to be adequately equipped before being assigned the additional task. If not, the agency might have difficulty implementing rules efficiently, thereby undermining investors’ safety.
In order to avoid potential problems in transitioning, the ECB recommends adopting the proposed system in phases. With this step-by-step approach, ESMA and crypto firms would have ample time to prepare for the impending changes. At present, the proposal is under consideration by both EU member states and the European Parliament.
The move is particularly noteworthy as this marks the biggest change in the EU since the launch of its Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework. Until now, crypto firms and exchanges have been under the supervision of national regulators.
Moreover, the European Securities and Markets Authority has been playing only a supporting role. But under the new rule, ESMA would take direct control over the largest crypto companies operating across multiple EU countries.
ECB Rate Cut Expectations Grow Amid Weak Eurozone Outlook
Interestingly, the European crypto regulation news comes amid rising expectations of the EU rate cut. Reports state that the European Central Bank is poised to announce a 25-basis-point rate cut at its upcoming meeting. At the same time, some believe that even a 50-basis-point cut is possible.
Many see this as just the beginning of multiple EU rate cuts in 2026. If this reduction happens, it may be followed by multiple cuts this year if the economic conditions remain weak.
The action has been taken against the backdrop of ambiguity regarding the monetary policies of the US Federal Reserve Bank. Despite considerable inflation, the Federal Reserve is expected to maintain higher interest rates.
The economic situation in the eurozone is weak, especially in major European Union economies such as Germany and France. Business activity has been sluggish, with negative sentiment prevailing across both the manufacturing and service sectors. The interest rate may decline to 1.5% due to weak economic growth.
There are several reasons why such a trend will be expected. First, the inflation rate is lower than the 2% target set by the ECB. Second, consumer expenditure and business sentiment are weak.
Finally, the global environment poses risks that are not helping the situation. For all these reasons, a shift towards a more accommodative monetary policy by the ECB will be expected.
Source: https://www.thecoinrepublic.com/2026/04/13/crypto-regulation-ecb-hands-oversight-to-esma-amid-rate-cut-expectations/








