ESMA targets MiCA crypto custodians with resilience review
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has launched a supervisory review of MiCA-authorized crypto custodians, moving its focus from licensing to testing how firms handle operational risks in practice.
Summary
- ESMA has launched a review of MiCA-authorized crypto custodians' operational resilience.
- Regulators will examine custody controls, key management, incident response and third-party risks.
- The review comes as the EU prepares to revisit parts of MiCA following the U.S. GENIUS Act.
According to the European Securities and Markets Authority, the regulator has started a Common Supervisory Action (CSA) covering a sample of authorized crypto-asset service providers (CASPs) under the European Union's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework.
The review concentrates on custody services and will examine whether firms have effective operational resilience measures rather than relying only on regulatory approval.
ESMA examines custody controls after MiCA licensing
As outlined by ESMA, supervisors will assess digital operational resilience in several critical areas, including private key and storage management, transaction controls, incident response procedures and reliance on third-party technology providers. The review comes soon after MiCA's transitional period ended, making it one of the first coordinated supervisory exercises under the EU's crypto rulebook.
In a statement, Sebastien Dessimoz, co-founder and managing partner of digital asset infrastructure company Taurus, said the message from regulators is that obtaining a MiCA licence is only the starting point for custodians.
Dessimoz said custody providers are now expected to demonstrate that their operational controls can withstand real-world risks instead of simply asserting that their systems are secure. He added that as digital assets become more integrated into regulated financial infrastructure, regulators expect the same level of security, accountability and resilience seen in traditional financial markets.
Institutional clients have already increased scrutiny of custody practices, according to Jody Mettler, chief operating officer of BitGo and president of BitGo Trust. In a statement, Mettler said clients increasingly ask how custodians segregate customer assets, manage access controls, respond to security incidents and maintain business continuity during periods of market stress.
She added that regulators are paying closer attention to the operational standards supporting digital asset services rather than limiting their assessment to licensing requirements.
MiCA oversight expands as Europe revisits crypto rules
Industry participants also see the review as an early indication of how MiCA supervision could evolve. Markus Levin, co-founder of blockchain infrastructure company XYO, told Cointelegraph that receiving MiCA authorization and proving operational resilience are separate challenges. He said firms that can demonstrate strong operational controls before supervisory reviews conclude could be better positioned as institutional participation in digital assets increases.
Meanwhile, Yuriy Brisov, a lawyer at Digital & Analogue Partners, said the review combines obligations under both MiCA and the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA). According to Brisov, concentration among custody technology providers means weaknesses at a single vendor could affect multiple regulated firms simultaneously, making supply chain resilience a key compliance issue.
At the same time, European regulators are already preparing the next stage of MiCA. According to a Euronews report, European Commission officials are planning a review of parts of the framework from 2027 after the United States enacted the GENIUS Act.
The review is expected to examine how non-EU stablecoin issuers should be treated under existing rules as international crypto regulation continues to develop.
Current market data also shows MiCA's regulated exchange ecosystem continuing to expand. DefiLlama's MiCA exchange dashboard, cited by Wu Blockchain, ranked Kraken as the largest regulated venue by liquidity, with more than $400 million in spot liquidity and over $220 million in perpetual liquidity on the live dashboard.
Coinbase remained the second-largest regulated exchange by liquidity, according to the same data, underscoring the growing scale of platforms operating under Europe's licensing framework.
Disclaimer: This content is provided for general branding and informational purposes only and doesn't constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Any events, rewards, online events, or related information mentioned herein should not be considered a recommendation, solicitation, or invitation to purchase, sell, trade, or otherwise deal in any crypto assets or to use any services. Crypto assets are highly volatile and may result in loss. WEEX services and online events may not be available in all regions and are subject to applicable laws, regulations, and eligibility requirements. You are responsible for ensuring that your use of WEEX services complies with local laws and for carefully assessing the risks before participating in any crypto-related activities.
You may also like

Blockchain.RIO to Feature 13 Content Tracks Discussing the Future Financial Infrastructure of Latin America

Timelock Account Recovery Gives Ethereum Smart Accounts A Safer Backup Route

Federal Reserve Chair to Congress: No Rescue for Crypto Markets; Controlling Inflation Remains Our Top Priority

A Home Miner Extracted $200,000 Worth of Bitcoin with a $200 Device!

Chainlink Reaches Record Number of Holders as Market Awaits Recovery Signal

How Long Can the Storage Boom Last?

Waller: Fed Has Zero Tolerance for Persistently High Inflation

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire: When AI Meets Blockchain, the Familiar 'Company' is About to Disintegrate

Ethereum vs Cardano Whitepaper Comparison 2026: Architecture, Tokenomics & Governance

Capital Flees from Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs to Tokenized Stocks

All-In Latest Highlights: Anthropic IPO vs OpenAI, Unveiling AI's Real ROI, China's Model Export Restrictions, and Universal Shareholding

SpaceX Stock Near IPO Price: What Traders Need to Know
SpaceX stock trades near $139, just 3.1% above its $135 IPO price after a sharp retrace from above $200. Here is what the move means.

Why Is XRP Down 60% Despite ETF Inflows and Ripple’s SEC Case Ending?
Why is XRP down nearly 60% despite ETF inflows and the end of Ripple’s SEC case? Explore the role of market weakness, Open USD and the CLARITY Act.

Blocked in Europe, Binance claims 70% of withdrawals went to personal wallets

Stablecoins: Financial Sovereignty Under the State's Gaze?

a16z: TradFi is Not Embracing DeFi Models, But Accelerating Adoption of Blockchain Technology

Bitcoin Update: The BIP-110 Battle Could Change Everything on the Blockchain by the End of August

Has the Economy Crashed? Atlanta Fed Sounds the Alarm

China's Exports Surprise and Boost Asia's Markets

Bitcoin Facing American Debt: A Bulwark Against Currency Devaluation?

What is a crypto launchpad? Fair launches, presales, and bonding curves explained

SpaceX and Starlink's X Accounts Hacked, $135,000 Stolen in Meme Coin Rug Pull Scam

Cryptos Fall as Oil Prices Surge and Fed Rate Hike Bets Soar

Crypto Sector Establishes New Financial Market for AI Processing Power

Can the Traffic from Robinhood Chain Save UNI? Understanding the Fixed Costs that Passive AMMs Cannot Eliminate

Wall Street Morning Brief: US Stocks Suffer Losses, Apple Hits New High, Tonight's CPI and Waller Hearing Will Determine Rate Path

Semifinal AI Predictions Chaos: Is France Safe? The Fate of England vs Argentina Remains Uncertain

Interview with Robinhood Founder: The Will of Retail Investors Surpasses All 'Smart Money'

WEEX Multi-Market Mode: See 6 Crypto Pairs at Once, Catch Every Breakout













