Zerohash Europe just became the first company to secure an Electronic Money Institution license under the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation framework, giving it the green light to handle stablecoin and e-money services across the continent.
What the license actually means
MiCA treats fiat-pegged stablecoins as “e-money tokens.” That means if you want to issue or handle stablecoins tied to the euro, dollar, or any other fiat currency inside the EU, you need to be either a licensed credit institution or an authorized Electronic Money Institution.
Zerohash chose the EMI route. That authorization now allows the company to provide regulated crypto and e-money services across the entire European Economic Area, not just a single member state.
Under MiCA, stablecoin issuers operating as EMIs must maintain liquid, segregated reserves backing their tokens. They’re required to offer daily redemptions at par value, meaning a user holding a euro-denominated stablecoin can swap it back for an actual euro on any given day. Governance and reporting standards are stringent, designed to prevent the kind of opacity that has historically plagued stablecoin operations.
Why this matters for the broader market
Zerohash operates as a B2B infrastructure provider. It doesn’t sell directly to retail consumers. Instead, it powers the crypto capabilities that banks, fintechs, and other platforms offer to their own customers.
Circle obtained its own EMI license in France in 2024, but Zerohash’s authorization appears to be the first specifically aligned with MiCA’s stablecoin provisions. The distinction matters because MiCA represents a unified EU-wide standard rather than a single country’s regulatory approval.
MiCA’s stablecoin rules are the strictest anywhere
The segregated reserves requirement is a direct response to past controversies in the stablecoin space. When Tether admitted in 2019 that its reserves included commercial paper and other non-cash instruments, regulators globally took notice. MiCA’s answer was to make reserve quality and liquidity a legal obligation.
Daily redemption at par means stablecoin issuers can’t impose waiting periods, haircuts, or withdrawal fees that effectively trap users’ funds. For an EMI operating under these rules, the stablecoin has to function almost identically to a bank deposit in terms of accessibility.
Issuers need to maintain transparent operational structures and submit regular reports to their supervisory authority. The compliance overhead could end up concentrating the European stablecoin market among a handful of well-capitalized providers.





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