On June 24–25, 2025, top regulators from both sides of the Atlantic met in Brussels for the EU–U.S. Joint Financial Regulatory Forum. The goal? Align global rules for crypto, stablecoins, and CBDCs.
The U.S. Treasury confirmed in a July 1 press release that digital assets were a top priority — signaling that the world’s biggest financial powers are moving fast to coordinate crypto policy at scale.
Right now, it’s a mess. Crypto crosses borders, but laws don’t.
Without global coordination, we get:
At the Brussels summit, EU officials shared updates on MiCA — their sweeping new crypto framework — and plans for the digital euro. U.S. regulators outlined enforcement by the SEC Crypto Task Force and efforts to monitor stablecoins and DeFi risks.
The forum wasn’t just about crypto. It zoomed out to digital finance as a whole:
Translation? They’re building the pipes — and plugging the leaks — for a global, digital financial system.
Crypto’s still a regulatory minefield. Officials voiced concern about:
But for the first time, coordination is winning over chaos. Both sides agreed that harmonized policy is the only way to:
This isn’t just a photo-op. It’s the beginning of global crypto rulemaking.
With MiCA going live and the U.S. gearing up for legislation, we’re seeing the pieces of a unified crypto policy fall into place. Developers, investors, and institutions have begged for clarity — and now it’s coming.
Crypto’s no longer the wild west. It’s a mainstream financial asset — and the world’s biggest economies just admitted it.
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