Malta’s financial regulator is exploring how decentralized finance (DeFi) could fit into the European Union’s Markets for Crypto Assets (MiCA) framework, focusing on governance, accountability and the meaning of “full decentralization.”
The Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA) said that while MiCA excludes cryptocurrency services provided on a “fully decentralized basis and without any intermediaries”, many DeFi projects retain centralized features such as administrator keys, governance concentration, protocol update rights and control over user interfaces, in a discussion paper published on Wednesday.
The regulator is seeking comments on whether decentralization should be assessed as a spectrum rather than a binary concept and whether a standardized framework should be developed to determine when a protocol falls outside the scope of MiCA.
DeFi is something of a gray area under the EU framework for regulating cryptocurrencies, as it excludes services provided in a fully decentralized manner, but lacks a clear description of when a protocol or platform reaches that threshold.
The MSFA article also asks whether regulated crypto companies should be required to conduct smart contract audits, governance reviews, and risk assessments before integrating DeFi protocols into their services.




