
What Happened With Bullish’s Approval?
Bullish has become one of the first exchanges to secure approval under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA). The licence, granted by Germany’s financial regulator BaFin, allows Bullish’s Frankfurt-based subsidiary to offer trading and custody across all 27 EU member states without reapplying in each jurisdiction.
Germany is known for tough oversight, making BaFin’s nod a significant milestone. Until now, crypto exchanges had to navigate fragmented national regimes. MiCA, which came into force in June, sets bloc-wide standards for custody, consumer protection, trading, and disclosures, while oversight rests with national authorities and the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA).
Investor Takeaway
Why Does MiCA Matter for Crypto Firms?
MiCA replaces the patchwork of national laws with a harmonized framework across Europe. Firms licensed in one state can “passport” services across the bloc, streamlining market access. For institutions, it offers greater legal certainty and standard consumer protections. However, the regime is not comprehensive. Stablecoin services require additional e-money or payment institution licences by March 2026, a looming deadline that is already reshaping business models.
ESMA has urged regulators to apply the rules strictly, warning against rubber-stamp approvals. Early licensees like Bullish may face closer scrutiny as standards converge, testing whether exchanges can maintain compliance in the long run.
How Bullish Got Here
The approval caps a transformative period for Bullish. In August, the exchange raised about $1.1 billion in a New York Stock Exchange listing under the ticker “BULL.” Backers include Peter Thiel and hedge fund manager Alan Howard. The firm traces its roots to Block.one, which raised $4 billion in the EOS token sale of 2017–2018. Launched in 2021, Bullish is now led by Tom Farley, a former president of the NYSE.
Bullish has also expanded through acquisitions. In late 2023, it bought crypto news outlet CoinDesk from Digital Currency Group for an estimated $70–80 million in cash. Its European pivot via MiCA builds on this trajectory, combining Wall Street access, high-profile backers, and a push for credibility in regulated markets.
What’s Next for Bullish in Europe?
Bullish joins peers such as Spain’s Bit2Me in securing early MiCA approvals. Other firms are targeting France, Malta, and the Netherlands as entry points. For Bullish, the German base provides immediate access to Europe’s largest economy and an institutional client pool that favors tightly regulated venues.
The key question is whether Bullish prioritizes retail expansion or leans on institutional custody and liquidity services. Either way, its licence gives it a platform to scale across Europe, though meeting ongoing disclosure and conduct standards will be critical as ESMA and BaFin intensify supervision.
Investor Takeaway