According to news from CoinWorld on July 8, Circle's EU Policy Director Patrick Hansen shared that the MiCA regulations have been implemented for 6 months for crypto asset service providers (CASP) and 12 months for stablecoins, with new developments in July: 14 institutions from 7 EU countries have been authorized to issue stablecoins, with 3 from France and 1 or 3 from countries like Germany. They have collectively issued 20 types of electronic currency tokens or single fiat currency stablecoins, with 12 priced in euros, 7 in dollars, and 1 in Czech koruna. A total of 39 CASPs have received MiCA licenses, spread across 9 EU/EFTA countries, covering traditional finance (like BBVA, Clearstream, CACEIS), fintech (like N26, Trade Republic, eToro, Robinhood), and native crypto companies (like Coinbase, Kraken, Bitpanda, OKX, Bitstamp). Currently, there are no issuers of asset reference tokens (ART), and the market lacks relevant demand. About 30 crypto asset white papers have been notified, with the transition period ending in many countries, the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets leading in issuing licenses, but over 35 companies have been listed as non-compliant CASPs by Italian regulators.