
UK trade groups are urging the government to include blockchain in future transatlantic technology agreements with the United States. In a coordinated move, organizations representing finance, technology, and digital assets delivered a letter to Business Secretary Peter Kyle. They warned that excluding blockchain from the “UK-US Tech Bridge” initiative could weaken the UK’s competitiveness against other global markets.
The letter was also sent to Lucy Rigby, Economic Secretary to the Treasury. It carried signatures from the Cryptoasset Business Council, UK Finance, and TheCityUK. A Bloomberg report reveals that these groups said distributed ledger technology should form a “core strand” of the planned collaboration.
They argued that fragmented regulation and limited market access could emerge if London failed to align with Washington. Government officials responded by stressing that the UK and US remain “natural partners.” A spokesperson noted that cooperation already covers artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and cybersecurity. Adding blockchain was presented as an extension of these efforts.
The groups named stablecoins and tokenization as central areas of opportunity. Tokenization has drawn increasing interest as experts predict more assets moving onchain. Stablecoin development gained new momentum after the United States passed legislation for the sector in July.
The proposals came ahead of President Donald Trump’s upcoming visit to the UK. His delegation includes major technology leaders such as OpenAI’s Sam Altman and Nvidia’s Jensen Huang. Lobby groups said such meetings provide an opportunity to establish consistent digital asset policies.
The Financial Conduct Authority plans to accept crypto license applications starting next year. Officials confirmed that the framework will address stablecoins, tokenization, and trading platforms. In addition, UK regulators discussed digital asset rules with US counterparts in June, including the UK’s Digital Securities Sandbox and potential cross-border payment reforms.
In another policy change, retail investors will again access crypto exchange-traded notes beginning October 2025. The FCA lifted a four-year ban, allowing purchases through approved platforms. Outside policy discussions, British companies continue shaping the digital asset market. The Smarter Web Company, the UK’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder, is preparing expansion through acquisitions. The firm controls 2,470 BTC, valued near $275 million.
Executives confirmed they aim for a future FTSE 100 listing within three years. Industry leaders argue that integrating blockchain within the UK-US Tech Bridge could anchor long-term growth. They also view regulatory alignment as essential for stablecoin innovation and tokenized markets.