Supply Chain Report — Global financial regulators are escalating their focus on the cryptocurrency sector, driven by stark warnings about illicit finance and the looming deadline for a comprehensive European regulatory framework. The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) fired a major warning shot in early March 2026, revealing that stablecoins were involved in approximately 84% of illicit virtual asset transaction volumes in 2025. The report from the global money laundering and terrorist financing watchdog identified peer-to-peer (P2P) transactions via unhosted wallets as a key vulnerability, urging nations to fully implement its standards to impose clear customer due diligence obligations on stablecoin issuers.
This global alert coincides with a critical deadline in the European Union. According to Zyphe, Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs), known as Crypto-Asset Service Providers (CASPs) under the new rules, must secure authorization under the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation by July 1, 2026, or cease operations. Many firms are reportedly unprepared, mistakenly treating MiCA as the sole rulebook while the substantive Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements are detailed in the EU’s broader AML Regulation and Transfer of Funds Regulation (TFR), which requires data for all inter-CASP transfers regardless of amount.
This regulatory pressure is part of a fundamental shift in the EU’s compliance philosophy, as noted by EY. The new Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA) is preparing regulations that emphasize a harmonized, technology-driven, and risk-based approach to Customer Due Diligence (CDD), moving away from simple data collection. The goal is to create a more strategic and effective compliance framework across the single market, with the new rules set for implementation in 2027.
However, as regulators tighten their grip, a counter-trend is emerging. MEXC News reports on a growing niche of ‘no-KYC’ payment gateways that allow online merchants to accept traditional card payments from Visa and Mastercard while receiving settlement in cryptocurrency. These platforms enable merchants to go live in under a minute with just a crypto wallet address, bypassing the extensive verification required by traditional processors. This development presents a direct challenge to the tightening KYC and AML frameworks by creating a bridge from the regulated fiat world to the crypto ecosystem with minimal identity verification, highlighting the ongoing battle between regulatory enforcement and market innovation.
#Crypto #KYC #AML #FATF #MiCA











