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Bank of England faces calls from UK lawmakers to ease stablecoin plans

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By Reuters | Updated: June 3, 2026

LONDON, June 3 (Reuters) – British lawmakers urged the Bank of England on Wednesday to soften planned rules on stablecoins, warning that overly strict ​requirements could hinder the development of a nascent sterling-backed market.

A ‌cross-party House of Lords committee said the central bank should reconsider proposals to cap the amount of stablecoins held by individuals and businesses and require ​issuers to back tokens with non-interest-bearing deposits.

Stablecoins are a type ​of cryptoasset designed to hold a steady value, usually ⁠by being pegged to a fiat currency. The market is dominated ​by U.S. dollar-linked tokens, while sterling-denominated stablecoins represent a tiny fraction of those ​in use. UK authorities aim to finalise stablecoin rules by the end of the year, broadly in line with the U.S.

“The Bank, [Financial Conduct Authority] and HM ​Treasury must recognise that the stablecoin market is nascent and ​growing, and adapt the regulatory regime as the market develops,” the House of ‌Lords ⁠Financial Services Regulation Committee said in a report.

The BoE, whose rules will apply to “systemic” stablecoins – those that are widely used for everyday payments – has previously said its protections are necessary to head off ​a potential flight from ​bank deposits ⁠into stablecoins, which could cause a credit crunch.

Committee chair Sheila Noakes, a Conservative lawmaker, told Reuters she was ​unconvinced the BoE had taken the right approach ​to address ⁠those concerns. The BoE should be open to “a principles-based, less prescriptive approach,” the committee said.

In a recent speech, BoE Deputy Governor Sarah ⁠Breeden hinted ​that the central bank was reconsidering holding ​limits. A BoE spokesperson said its final policy and draft rules for systemic stablecoins would ​be published later in June.

Reporting by Phoebe Seers Editing by Alexandra Hudson

© Thomson Reuters 2026

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