BitGo chief executive Mike Belshe is urging crypto firms still waiting on authorization to run on the company’s German-licensed European infrastructure rather than risk losing access to EU clients once the bloc’s July 1 compliance deadline lands.

Belshe made the pitch in a post on X aimed squarely at operators caught between an expiring grace period and an application backlog. After July 1, firms without authorization cannot keep serving EU clients, he wrote, and users should not be left scrambling because their platform is still waiting on approval. The post reframes a regulatory wall as a commercial opening, casting BitGo as the entity ready to take on the firms that run out of runway.

The date closes the transitional window that has allowed providers registered before Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) took effect to keep running under older national rules. Once it lapses, a single bloc-wide authorization takes the place of the country-by-country registrations that governed the sector, and only firms holding it keep the right to reach customers anywhere across the 27-nation market.

BitGo Pitches Rented Compliance

BitGo Europe already holds a MiCA license through Germany’s financial regulator BaFin, and Belshe presented that authorization as infrastructure other firms can rent rather than rebuild from scratch. The licensed entity supports regulated custody, transfer, staking, and trading across the EU, giving a stalled platform a way to keep its doors open through BitGo’s stack while its own paperwork sits in the queue.

Belshe split the target audience in two. Firms still waiting on their own approval form one group, and firms that would simply rather lean on licensed rails than build a compliant operation themselves form the other. Either can plug in and keep moving safely and compliantly, he wrote, shifting the cost and delay of a fresh license onto a provider that already cleared it.

He tied the offer to BitGo’s longer-running ambition with the post’s closing line, writing that

“Europe needs crypto access on regulated rails. That’s what BitGo has been building.”

MiCA Deadline Thins the Field

The cutoff threatens to clear out much of the market that grew up under the looser national regimes. Forecasts put as much as three-quarters of the firms that earned approval under those earlier systems at risk of falling out of compliance the moment the window shuts, leaving a narrower field of fully cleared players to take in displaced users and the platforms racing to stay legal.

BitGo has spent the past year building toward that exact scenario. BaFin signed off on BitGo Europe’s MiCA license in May 2025, clearing the subsidiary to do business throughout the Union and laying the foundation for the pitch Belshe is now making. The company stretched that reach into a Crypto-as-a-Service platform covering all 30 European Economic Area countries this March, one that hands banks and fintechs API access to regulated custody, trading, and fiat settlement so they need not stand up the machinery themselves. The firm itself listed publicly on January 22 and now carries the ticker BTGO on the New York Stock Exchange.

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