The license will enable B2C2 to extend its over-the-counter spot trading services to all EU member states and three EEA countries through MiCA’s passporting regime, enabling cross-border access to digital asset liquidity under a unified regulatory framework, the company said in a statement on Friday.
The company added that this approval makes B2C2 the first global OTC liquidity provider to secure a CASP license. The company previously registered as a virtual asset service provider in Luxembourg in 2024.
“Achieving MiCA approval is a significant achievement for B2C2,” B2C2 CEO Thomas Restout said in a statement. “This demonstrates the regulatory and operational standards under which we operate and reflects our long-standing focus on regulatory compliance and governance.”
According to the company, this development comes as the July 2026 deadline for the MiCA transition period approaches. The framework was proposed by the European Commission in 2020, adopted by the European Parliament in 2023, and became fully applicable to crypto companies from December 2024.
With this approval, B2C2 joins a growing group of companies operating under MiCA licenses across Europe, including Luxembourg’s Coinbase and Ireland’s Kraken.

