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    Zafar is a seasoned crypto and blockchain news writer with four years of experience. Known for accuracy, in-depth analysis, and a clear, engaging style, Zafar actively participates in blockchain communities. Beyond writing, Zafar enjoys trading and exploring the latest trends in the crypto market.

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    European Banks Are Moving Into Crypto: Who’s Live, Who’s Lagging, and What’s Next

    Story Highlights
    • BlockStories data shows 8 of Europe's 20 largest banks have live crypto services.

    • MiCA gave banks the legal cover, but it was client capital flowing to Revolut and Trade Republic that forced their hand.

    • A consortium of 12 banks including BNP Paribas, ING and UniCredit is building a euro-backed stablecoin.

    Four years ago, European banks were blocking crypto transactions. Today, they are offering Bitcoin and Ethereum directly inside their retail banking apps.

    Data from BlockStories, published March 12, shows exactly where Europe’s 20 largest banks stand on crypto trading and custody. Santander, BPCE, BBVA and KBC are already live for retail and institutional clients. Deutsche Bank has announced custody. DZ Bank secured MiCA approval from Germany’s BaFin in January to roll out its meinKrypto platform across the cooperative banking network. Credit Agricole and Societe Generale have institutional custody in place.

    Not all 20 are fully there yet. As analyst Richard Fetyko also noted, only 8 of the top 20 EU banks have live crypto services at scale, with most still in announcement or pilot mode. But the direction, he said, is crystal clear.

    Why Are Banks Changing Their Crypto Stance?

    Three forces made this inevitable. MiCA gave banks the legal framework to participate without regulatory risk. Client capital was already flowing to Revolut, Trade Republic and Bitstack anyway. And the fee opportunity was impossible to ignore.

    FinTech and payments analyst Panagiotis Kriaris put it as: “If banks don’t adopt stablecoins, they risk being pushed out of the digital money layer entirely.”

    His analysis highlights that stablecoins enable instant cross-border settlement and 24/7 liquidity management, cutting banks out of the payment flows and fee pools they have depended on for decades.

    The defensive logic is as strong as the commercial one.

    Read More: Stablecoin News: Circle Is Minting Billions in USDC While Crypto Recovers

    The Next Move: A Euro to Challenge the Dollar

    Nearly 99% of the stablecoin market is tied to the US dollar. Even payments between two European parties often run through US-centric infrastructure. That is the problem a consortium of 12 banks including BNP Paribas, ING and UniCredit is trying to solve.

    Their venture, Qivalis, will issue a MiCA-compliant, euro-backed stablecoin for 24/7 on-chain settlement, targeting a launch in the second half of 2026.

    Jan-Oliver Sell, CEO of Qivalis, framed the stakes simply: “Settlement speed is a new interest rate.”

    The goal is not just efficiency. It is sovereignty. As Sell put it: “True sovereignty in 2026 and beyond is not just about borders. It’s about data and payments.”

    Europe’s banks spent years resisting crypto. Now they are racing to own the infrastructure beneath it.

    Also Read: Did the Clarity Act Pass? Not Yet, But Banks Are Already Buying These 8 Altcoins

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