Earlier, it was revealed that nine large European banks – Banca Sella, CaixaBank, Danske Bank, DekaBank, ING, KBC, Raiffeisen Bank International, SEB, and UniCredit – announced on 25 Sept this year that they had teamed up to launch a MiCAR–compliant stablecoin issuer under the supervision of the Dutch Central Bank (DNB), which will issue a euro stablecoin. On 1 Dec, BNP Paribas SA joined the consortium, expanding the number of participating FIs in this MiCAR-compliant euro stablecoin initiative.
Now, the incorporation and the name of the Amsterdam-domiciled company, Qivalis, and its governance structure were announced.
This is a signal that Europe’s largest FIs are taking steps to build a digital, on-chain and trusted future “anchored in the collective credibility and regulatory oversight of leading European banks.”
An experienced team has been assembled to guide operations from regulatory approval through “commercial launch.”
Jan-Oliver Sell will serve as CEO of Qivalis.
His previous roles include Managing Director at Coinbase Germany, where he secured the crypto custody license from the German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin), as well as positions at Binance and iFunded; as well as 18 years in various “senior roles in the asset management sector in the City of London.”
Jan-Oliver Sell will be joined on the Executive Board by Floris Lugt, CFO, who previously was Lead Digital Assets Wholesale Banking at ING, and brings experience from “previous roles within treasury and financial risk areas at ING and ING France.”
Sir Howard Davies will serve as Chair of the Supervisory Board of Qivalis.
He is a British banker and regulator who “served as the first Chairman of the Financial Services Authority (1997-2003), Director of the London School of Economics (2003-2011), and Chairman of RBS (2015-2020), and previously held roles including Deputy Governor of the Bank of England and Director General of the CBI.”
All appointments mentioned “are subject to regulatory approval.”
CEO Jan-Oliver Sell said that the launch of a euro-denominated stablecoin, backed by a consortium of European Banks, “represents a watershed moment for European digital commerce and financial innovation.”
They added that a native Euro stablecoin isn’t “just about convenience – it’s about monetary autonomy in the digital age.”
Presenting new opportunities for European companies and consumers to interact with “on-chain payments and digital asset markets in their own currency.”
It enables European and global fintechs, SMEs, and consumers to transact seamlessly across borders while “maintaining the stability and trust they associate with the euro.”
With its governance structure in place, Qivalis is working towards obtaining its regulatory approval and planning “to launch the euro-denominated stablecoin in the second half of 2026.”
This digital payment instrument, “leveraging blockchain technology, aims to become a European payment standard in the digital ecosystem.”
The euro-denominated stablecoin will enable 24/7 access to “efficient cross-border payments, programmable payments, and improvements in supply chain management and digital asset settlements, from tokenized assets to crypto currencies.”
The stablecoin will provide “near-instant, low-cost payments and settlements.”
Sir Howard Davies, Chairman of the Supervisory Board of Qivalis said that this infrastructure is essential if Europe wants “to compete globally in the digital economy while preserving its economic independence.”
Davies added that they’re not just building payment rails.
They’re ensuring that European values “around data protection, financial stability, and regulatory compliance are embedded into the future of the next level of digital money.”
The consortium now remains open to other banks joining, reinforcing its mission to drive advancements “across payments, settlement, and tokenized and digital assets, with clarity, security, responsibility at the forefront.”
Qivalis has set a launch target for H2 2026.
Preparatory activities will reportedly focus primarily on “regulatory dialogue, as well as operational and technical readiness in the months to come.”