🚀 Gate Square “Gate Fun Token Challenge” is Live!
Create tokens, engage, and earn — including trading fee rebates, graduation bonuses, and a $1,000 prize pool!
Join Now 👉 https://www.gate.com/campaigns/3145
💡 How to Participate:
1️⃣ Create Tokens: One-click token launch in [Square - Post]. Promote, grow your community, and earn rewards.
2️⃣ Engage: Post, like, comment, and share in token community to earn!
📦 Rewards Overview:
Creator Graduation Bonus: 50 GT
Trading Fee Rebate: The more trades, the more you earn
Token Creator Pool: Up to $50 USDT per user + $5 USDT for the first 50 launche
Circle’s EU Policy Chief Patrick Hansen Busts AMLR 2027 FUD
Patrick Hansen, Director of EU Strategy and Policy at Circle, has once again pushed back against claims that Europe’s new Anti-Money Laundering Regulation (AMLR) will “ban” self-custody wallets or peer-to-peer crypto transactions.
It comes just over a week after the Circle executive warned that Dual MiCA–PSD2 licensing could double compliance costs for EU stablecoin firms.
No, the EU Isn’t Killing Self-Custody: Patrick Hansen Busts AMLR 2027 FUD {#h-no-the-eu-isn-t-killing-self-custody-patrick-hansen-busts-amlr-2027-fud}
In a post on X (Twitter), Hansen called out misinformation circulating among major cryptocurrency accounts.
His comments come as debate intensifies ahead of the AMLR’s expected implementation around summer 2027.
The comprehensive framework is designed to combat money laundering and terrorist financing across the European Union.
What the AMLR Actually Does—and Doesn’t Do {#h-what-the-amlr-actually-does-and-doesn-t-do}
Contrary to social media panic, Hansen clarified that the AMLR’s obligations apply only to crypto-asset service providers (CASPs). These include exchanges, brokers, and custodial wallets, not individuals using self-custody solutions.
Key takeaways include:
In other words, AMLR reinforces existing practices rather than introducing sweeping new bans.
From FUD to Facts: Advocacy Softened Earlier Proposals {#h-from-fud-to-facts-advocacy-softened-earlier-proposals}
The final AMLR text marks a win for crypto advocacy groups. Early drafts proposed severe restrictions, including €1,000 limits on self-custody payments and extending AML obligations to DAOs, DeFi projects, and NFT platforms.
Those measures were ultimately removed after extensive industry engagement. Hansen credited “education and advocacy efforts” for ensuring a balanced outcome that preserves Europe’s innovation potential while maintaining regulatory safeguards.
For European crypto users, the distinction is critical. The AMLR focuses on intermediaries, not individuals managing their own crypto assets.
This means investors can continue using self-custody wallets freely, while exchanges face clearer compliance expectations aligned with MiCA and the FATF travel rule. Still, Hansen cautioned that misinformation can distort public debate.
What’s Next: Implementation and Stablecoin Tensions {#h-what-s-next-implementation-and-stablecoin-tensions}
The AMLR awaits final approval in the European Parliament before taking effect in 2027. Meanwhile, Hansen has warned of another looming issue: regulatory overlap between MiCA and PSD2 rules.
According to Circle’s EU policy director, this could “double compliance costs” for euro stablecoin issuers by 2026. Hansen called this a potential “regulatory own goal” for the EU.
With MiCA already reshaping the region’s crypto market, Hansen’s clarification highlights that not all regulation spells restriction. It also suggests that sometimes, good advocacy keeps innovation alive.