- The Bank of England scrapped its plan to cap individual and corporate stablecoin holdings and will instead temporarily limit the total circulation of any single systemic stablecoin to £40 billion.
- Regulators cut the required share of non-interest-bearing central bank deposits backing stablecoins to 30%, allowing issuers to invest up to 70% of reserves in short-term U.K. government debt while still banning interest payments to coin holders.
- The reversal, prompted by industry pushback and a House of Lords committee, is intended to preserve business viability and competitiveness, with the guardrail expected to be phased out as the market matures ahead of full U.K. crypto rules in 2027.
The Bank of England officially reversed its controversial proposal to limit how much stablecoin individuals and consumers could hold, bowing to pressure from a U.K. House of Lords committee and the crypto industry.
The central bank said it will abandon its plans to impose a £20,000 ($27,000) holding limit on individuals and a £10 million limit on corporations, in a statement on Monday, Instead, the BOE is pivoting to a macro-level "temporary issuance guardrail," capping the total circulation of any single systemic stablecoin at £40 billion ($50.6 billion).
The central bank also lowered to 30% the amount of backing assets in central deposits yielding no interest they require issuers of stablecoins, digital currency pegged to fiat, to have. This allows for stablecoin firms permitting companies to allocate up to 70% of their reserves into yield-generating, short-term U.K. government debt (T-bills) with maturities under six months, according to the statement.
While issuers can harvest yield from these T-bills, the BoE is strictly banning companies from paying interest or dividends directly to users for simply holding the stablecoin. However, the bank is explicitly permitting activity-based rewards, such as cash-back tokens or loyalty points linked directly to payment transactions via Web3 apps.








