UK authorities have carried out their first coordinated crackdown on suspected illegal peer-to-peer crypto trading, sending a clear message: once crypto activity starts to look like a business, the state expects identification, monitoring, record-keeping, and accountability.
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), working alongside police and tax officials, visited eight London addresses linked to suspected unregistered crypto trading and issued cease-and-desist letters. Evidence collected during the raids is now feeding into ongoing criminal investigations, and notably, there are currently no FCA-registered peer-to-peer crypto traders in the UK.
The operation highlights a growing tension: peer-to-peer crypto has long represented both freedom and risk.
To regulators, it resembles a blind spot – a system with fewer identity checks, limited records, and easier movement between cash, bank transfers, wallets, and stablecoins.
To users, however, that same structure is often the point. It allows direct exchange without relying on banks or centralized platforms, preserving privacy and autonomy.
Why Authorities are Stepping In
The core issue is anti-money laundering enforcement. When crypto trading becomes a business, it falls into the same category as other financial services. That means firms are expected to:
These requirements are designed to prevent stolen funds, fraud proceeds, sanctions evasion, and terrorist financing from moving through what appear to be ordinary transactions.
From the FCA’s perspective, an unregistered peer-to-peer desk poses the same risks as any unlicensed money-services business: it can convert illicit cash into digital assets and back again, with limited oversight.
Crypto Ecosystem Slowly Resembling the Financial System
The crackdown raises a broader concern. As crypto is forced into compliance with traditional financial rules, it begins to resemble the system it was originally built to bypass.
Making crypto safer, in practice, often means making it:
But reducing those controls would reopen the very risks regulators are trying to contain.
This creates a difficult trade-off:
The UK raids make that tension explicit. They don’t just target illegal activity, they also narrow the space where crypto can function outside the boundaries of the traditional financial system.
The UK is definitely right on the law and on enforcement that makes crypto more like a financial system that is easy to monitor, track, and control.
Stay tuned to BitKE for the latest crypto regulatory updates across Europe.
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