Europe's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regime reached its stablecoin deadline on July 1, and Tether's USDT is the first high-profile casualty. Major EU-licensed exchanges have begun stripping the token from their order books, citing its failure to meet the regulation's electronic-money token authorisation requirements. As of Day Zero, a retail user inside the bloc cannot buy or sell USDT on a single compliant venue.
Why it matters
MiCA's stablecoin rules reserve full distribution rights for issuers authorised as e-money institutions or credit institutions inside the EU, and require daily reserve disclosures backed by low-risk assets. Tether has historically declined to pursue that licence, leaving USDT structurally non-compliant. The delistings crystallise a question the market has spent two years deferring: where does $120B-plus of stablecoin float actually settle when its dominant venue exits?
Market impact
Bitcoin held the $59,000 area and Ethereum traded steady as the deadline hit, suggesting the move was fully priced. The more interesting tape sits at the compliant end of the curve, where Circle's USDC and the euro-denominated EURM listings have absorbed the redirected euro-side flow. The structural risk is offshore: USDT pushed onto unregulated venues loses the MiCA consumer protections, and any future EU tightening of cross-border stable distribution lands first on those venues.
Frequently asked questions
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Could USDT return to EU-compliant venues?
In principle, yes, if Tether pursues MiCA e-money token authorisation and meets daily reserve disclosure requirements. Tether has historically declined to pursue that path.
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