El Banco de Inglaterra revela su enfoque para la supervisión de las stablecoins en libras esterlinas
El Bank of England ha propuesto un régimen regulatorio específico para las stablecoins sistémicas denominadas en libras esterlinas, un paso decisivo para los pagos digitales en el Reino Unido. Analizamos sus requisitos clave y lo que implican para el mercado.
When the Bank of England publishes a consultation paper with a foreword by Governor Andrew Bailey, the financial services sector takes notice. The November 2025 paper on systemic sterling-denominated stablecoins is no exception: it offers the central bank's most detailed view yet on how digital payment tokens should be regulated in the United Kingdom.
Stablecoins as payment infrastructure
The central premise of the Bank's proposal is straightforward: stablecoins that come to be widely used for everyday payments could pose risks to the UK's financial stability and therefore require regulation proportionate to that risk. This is not a theoretical concern. Global stablecoin transaction volume surpassed $33 trillion in 2025, and the Bank is positioning itself to manage the systemic implications before they materialize, not after.
What sets this proposal apart from earlier regulatory approaches is its focus on the "systemic" threshold. Non-systemic stablecoins—those not yet widely adopted for payments—remain under the FCA's sole oversight. But once a stablecoin crosses into systemic territory, it enters a dual regulatory regime supervised by both the Bank of England and the FCA.
The backing requirements
The most consequential aspect of the proposal concerns how stablecoin issuers must back their tokens. The Bank proposes that systemic issuers hold part of their backing assets in short-term UK government debt and maintain deposit accounts at the Bank of England itself. This is a notable step: it effectively integrates stablecoin issuers into the same financial infrastructure that underpins traditional banking.
For users, this matters because it addresses the fundamental question that has shadowed the stablecoin market since its earliest days: when you hold a stablecoin, can you truly redeem it for its face value in fiat currency? The Bank's answer is to require exactly that: "stability of nominal value, a robust legal claim, and the ability to redeem at par in fiat currency at all times."
Implications for the UK digital payments landscape
The practical implications reach well beyond stablecoin issuers themselves. If the framework succeeds in creating sterling tokens gen
Source: Bank of England