Digital Assets Oversight Moves from Early-Stage Policy Discussions to Implementation Phase : Analysis

Blockchain security firm CertiK has released its latest Skynet State of Digital Asset Regulations Report, underscoring a pivotal transition in the global crypto landscape. Released on April 28, 2026, the analysis shows that digital asset oversight has moved decisively from early-stage policy discussions to full-scale implementation and enforcement.

CertiK also pointed out that major jurisdictions—including the United States, European Union, Hong Kong, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates, Japan, Turkey, and Brazil—now operate mature regulatory regimes that closely mirror traditional financial rules.

One of the report’s most striking findings is the surge in anti-money laundering (AML) enforcement.

In the first half of 2025 alone, penalties and settlements tied to AML violations exceeded $900 million.

High-profile cases included a $504 million resolution involving OKX and a $297.4 million penalty for KuCoin.

European AML fines skyrocketed by 767 percent during the same period. In contrast, US Securities and Exchange Commission actions against cryptocurrencies plummeted 97 percent year-over-year, while the Department of Justice and FinCEN ramped up their focus on broader compliance issues.

Stablecoin frameworks have also become operational across leading markets. Issuers must now comply with strict requirements around reserve assets, redemption rights, regulatory oversight, and transparent reporting.

The primary hurdle for providers is no longer obtaining initial approval but managing fragmented rules across borders and absorbing rising compliance costs.

Smart contract security has gained equal prominence.

In Hong Kong, the UAE (through VARA and ADGM), the EU under the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA), and select U.S. states like New York and Wyoming, third-party audits or equivalent cybersecurity evaluations are either explicitly mandated or strongly implied.

CertiK emphasizes that these reviews should be viewed as recurring operational necessities rather than one-time expenses.

Financial safeguards for exchanges, custodians, and issuers now align closely with conventional banking standards.

Platforms must demonstrate adequate capital reserves, proper asset segregation, proper liquidity management, and comprehensive contingency planning.

Meanwhile, the Basel Framework’s new asset classification system, effective January 1, 2026, introduces clear distinctions.

Tokenized traditional assets and qualifying stablecoins fall into Group 1 with standard risk weights, while unbacked cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin and Ethereum are placed in Group 2, facing significantly higher capital charges that could dampen institutional adoption.

Tokenization continues to expand through adapted securities laws.

Initiatives like Franklin Templeton’s on-chain fund, Singapore’s Project Guardian, and Brazil’s Piloto Drex illustrate growing institutional participation.

Yet businesses operating across borders face mounting complexity: securing multi-jurisdictional licenses, scaling AML programs to match enforcement intensity, and budgeting for region-specific smart contract audits.

CertiK concludes that AML compliance remains the foremost risk for 2026.

As regulators flex their enforcement muscles, digital asset firms must treat regulatory adherence as a core business function rather than a checkbox exercise. The report serves as a reminder that the era of regulatory uncertainty is giving way to one of structured accountability under the Trump Administration, demanding more proactive adaptation from industry players worldwide.



Sponsored Links by DQ Promote

 

 

 
Send this to a friend