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Australian Regulator Clarifies Digital Asset Rules, Grants Transition Period Through June 2026

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Australian Regulator Clarifies Digital Asset Rules, Grants Transition Period Through June 2026

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has clarified that stablecoins, wrapped tokens, tokenized securities, and digital asset wallets are financial products under existing law, requiring providers to obtain financial services licenses while granting firms an eight-month transition period.

ASIC published updated guidance on October 29 confirming that many widely traded digital assets fall under current financial product regulations and will remain subject to licensing requirements under proposed law reforms. The regulator granted a sector-wide no-action position through June 30, 2026, allowing firms time to apply for licenses.

"Distributed ledger technology and tokenisation are reshaping global finance. ASIC's guidance provides the regulatory clarity that firms have been calling for to innovate confidently in Australia," said ASIC Commissioner Alan Kirkland in a statement .

The updated Information Sheet 225 clarifies when digital assets qualify as financial products under existing law, providing firms with greater certainty to operate while ensuring investors receive consumer protections. ASIC emphasized that licensing enables the regulator to act against poor practices causing harm.

"Many widely traded digital assets are financial products under current law – and will remain so under the Government's proposed law reform – meaning many providers require a financial services licence," Kirkland stated. "Licensing ensures consumers receive the full suite of protections under the law and allows ASIC to act when poor practices lead to harm."

ASIC made an in-principle decision to grant proposed regulatory relief for distributors of certain stablecoins and wrapped tokens, along with specific relief for custodians of digital assets classified as financial products. The regulator invited feedback on draft relief instruments until November 12, 2025.

The guidance targets all firms involved in digital assets, including existing financial services businesses exploring blockchain applications, new digital asset companies, brokers, intermediaries, and professional advisers. ASIC first published the information sheet in September 2017, with updates in 2018, 2019, and 2021.

ASIC consulted on the updates in December 2024 through Consultation Paper 381 , seeking feedback on application of financial services licensee obligations to digital asset businesses, potential relief for wrapped tokens and stablecoins during transition to proposed regulatory regimes, and a class no-action position for firms moving toward licensing.

The regulator released a summary of feedback themes from submissions that informed the no-action position and the decision to provide proposed relief with additional guidance examples.

ASIC stated it will factor in the current no-action position when considering historical conduct but will continue acting against egregious behavior involving significant consumer harm or widespread systemic misconduct.

The updated guidance aligns with and supports the Australian government's proposed Digital Asset Platform reforms. ASIC characterized the information sheet as complementing proposed reforms by clarifying financial product and service definitions under current law.

The regulatory package builds on practical relief ASIC provided earlier in 2025 to facilitate the Reserve Bank of Australia's Project Acacia, a wholesale tokenized asset markets research initiative, and recent relief for distribution of certain licensed stablecoins.

"Together, these show ASIC's ongoing commitment to supporting responsible innovation in the financial services sector," the regulator stated.

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