Can Europe Catch Up To The Us In The Stablecoin Race? Bitget Ceo Weighs In
- Europe, backed by MiCA and the first BaFin-regulated euro stablecoin EURAU, wants to close the gap.
- BeInCrypto: How do you assess Europe’s position against the US and Asia?
- Gracy Chen: Europe is anchored in MiCA, which offers a unified legal framework but demands a high compliance burden.
- Issuers must maintain full reserves, hold significant capital, and obtain an EMI license.
What Happened
Gracy Chen: Europe is anchored in MiCA, which offers a unified legal framework but demands a high compliance burden. Issuers must maintain full reserves, hold significant capital, and obtain an EMI license. This protects users but raises entry barriers and slows growth.
BeInCrypto: What does EURAU’s launch mean for Europe?
Market Context
US stablecoins dominate 99% of the global market. China is pushing ahead with the e-CNY. Europe, backed by MiCA and the first BaFin-regulated euro stablecoin EURAU, wants to close the gap. But can it move fast enough?
Why It Matters
Without these, Europe risks regulatory fragmentation and slower adoption.
A dedicated stablecoin sandbox and developer toolkits could attract new issuers and close the innovation gap.
Details
BeInCrypto spoke with Gracy Chen, CEO of Bitget, about Europe’s strengths, its regulatory challenges, and whether the EU can still play a leading role in digital finance.
Europe vs. US: Two Competing Models
BeInCrypto: How do you assess Europe’s position against the US and Asia?
By contrast, she said, the US GENIUS Act takes a lighter, innovation-first approach. It has allowed private issuers like Circle and Tether to scale rapidly, integrating USDC and USDT into Visa and Mastercard networks.
Asia, meanwhile, remains focused on CBDCs, with private stablecoins still playing a limited role.
Is MiCA Enough to Drive Innovation?
BeInCrypto: Does MiCA foster innovation, or does Europe need more flexibility?
Chen: MiCA is a strong foundation, but Europe needs three adjustments: faster authorization for CASPs and issuers, stronger support for multi-bank reserve models like EURAU, and harmonized implementation across all member states.
EURAU and European Sovereignty
Chen: EURAU is a pivotal step. As Germany’s first BaFin-regulated euro-backed crypto asset, it provides a compliant alternative to USD stablecoins and strengthens Europe’s monetary sovereignty. Regulatory clarity, she added, is the trigger for institutional adoption and cross-border payment use cases.
What Europe Must Do to Stay Competitive
BeInCrypto: What are the most urgent steps for the EU?
Chen: Europe must shift from policy clarity to operational readiness. The priority is accelerating MiCA-compliant euro stablecoins with native SEPA Instant or TIPS integration, enabling fast, low-cost ramps.
Europe also needs Level-2 standards, EU-wide passporting, and explicit rules for yield-bearing products such as tokenized T-bills — an area where the EU can differentiate from the US.
Infrastructure matters too. Europe needs unified fiat ramps, merchant acceptance programs, interoperability rails, and a common supervisory playbook.
Building Trust: Compliance and Technology
BeInCrypto: What builds trust in European stablecoins?
Chen: Transparency and audited reserves. MiCA’s quarterly reporting requirements help prevent the opacity that led to TerraUSD’s collapse.
Mandatory AML/KYC integration and secure, audited smart contracts provide additional assurance for institutions and retail users.