MiCA’s licensing deadline has quietly erased up to 92% of Europe’s crypto companies, concentrated what survived in Germany, and left the world’s largest exchange and largest stablecoin outside the regulated market.

On July 1st, the transitional window under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) closed for good, with no extension. When it did, just 244 firms held a full crypto-asset service provider (CASP) licence — down from more than 3,167 entities that operated across Europe under national registrations before MiCA. Measured against that base, roughly 92% of the market did not survive the transition; even against a narrower count of about 1,200 formally registered firms, four in five did not convert.

A new analysis from independent research publication Stack & Story, “Survival of the Licensed,” maps who cleared the bar, who did not, and what the cull means for the future of European crypto. The full piece, with data visualisations, is available at stackandstory.com.

Key findings

“The headline number is dramatic, but the real story is structural. Europe traded breadth for order. It now has a licensed, passportable, institution-ready core — and it paid for that with a long tail of small firms and the absence of the world’s largest exchange and stablecoin from its regulated venues. And the rulebook everyone just raced to meet is already being rewritten: the Commission opened a MiCA review the same week the deadline passed,” said a spokesperson for Stack & Story.

The analysis draws on ESMA statements and interim-register data, register mirrors (CASPTracker, Helms Advisory), Coincub’s pre-MiCA registration counts, and a Finray classification of successful authorisations. Stack & Story notes that “survival rate” is not an official metric and presents both the 7.7% (widest base) and ~20% (narrow base) framings; the 244 figure is a post-deadline register read.

Read the full analysis: stackandstory.com/stories/survival-of-the-licensed

About Stack & Story

Stack & Story is an independent, weekly briefing on crypto and markets — the numbers that moved, and the story behind them, in plain English. No hype, no jargon, no bag to defend. Free every Sunday, plus a 5-minute cheat sheet for reading any crypto situation like an analyst.

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