The UK Financial Conduct Authority is weighing a rule that would let UCITS schemes and most non-UCITS retail schemes hold crypto exchange-traded notes, capped at 10% of scheme property.

The proposal, set out in the FCA’s CP26/17 consultation, would move crypto exposure deeper into regulated fund plumbing. Retail investors already gained a route to crypto ETNs as standalone exchange products.

The new question is how far those notes can travel inside diversified portfolios run by authorized fund managers.

The answer is a short leash. The FCA would allow a limited ETN sleeve where it matches the fund’s disclosed objective and risk profile.

Direct holdings of Bitcoin, Ether, or other cryptoassets for investment purposes remain outside the proposal. Comments on the fund chapter are due July 13, 2026.

What the cap would allow

The proposed rule would give UK UCITS schemes and, with exceptions, non-UCITS retail schemes a capped allocation channel. The limit would apply at the scheme-property level, meaning up to 10% of a fund’s property could consist of transferable securities that are cryptoasset ETNs.

That threshold makes the exposure possible while keeping it secondary. A balanced multi-asset fund could use the permission as a satellite allocation.

A fund marketed as a conventional retail portfolio would still sit within the retail authorized-fund framework, with crypto exposure contained through the ETN wrapper and the percentage cap.

The FCA also draws lines between fund types. Qualified investor schemes, which are sold to professional clients and sophisticated investors, sit outside the same proposed retail-fund limit.

Long-term asset funds and NURS operating as funds of alternative investment funds face a proposed prohibition on crypto ETN holdings, with the FCA asking for views on that treatment.

Vehicle Proposed treatment Implication
UK UCITS schemes May hold cETNs up to 10% of scheme property Opens a capped route inside mainstream retail fund portfolios
Most NURS May hold cETNs up to 10% of scheme property Extends the same limited channel beyond UCITS structures
Qualified investor schemes Outside the proposed retail-fund cap Reflects their professional and sophisticated investor base
LTAFs and NURS operating as FAIFs Proposed prohibition on cETN holdings Signals that some fund wrappers may remain outside the channel
Direct crypto holdings Excluded for investment purposes Keeps the exposure indirect through listed notes

Infographic showing the FCA CP26/17 proposed 10% crypto ETN cap for UK UCITS and most NURS, the QIS treatment, proposed LTAF and FAIF prohibition, direct crypto exclusion, July 13, 2026 consultation deadline, manager checks, and adoption test.Infographic showing the FCA CP26/17 proposed 10% crypto ETN cap for UK UCITS and most NURS, the QIS treatment, proposed LTAF and FAIF prohibition, direct crypto exclusion, July 13, 2026 consultation deadline, manager checks, and adoption test.

That distinction gives the proposal its shape: access can expand through securities law and fund rules while custody of the coins stays outside the fund portfolio.

A fund could get price-linked crypto exposure through a security traded on a regulated venue. The underlying cryptoasset would remain beyond the authorized fund’s investment holdings.

The proposal follows the FCA’s earlier decision to open retail access to crypto ETNs traded on UK recognized investment exchanges.

FCA opens door for UK retail investors in crypto exchange-traded notesFCA opens door for UK retail investors in crypto exchange-traded notes
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That change, which came into force on Oct. 8, 2025, allowed retail consumers to access cETNs through FCA-approved UK investment exchanges, with financial promotion rules and Consumer Duty protections applying.

Those protections kept cETNs in a high-risk category. The FCA said retail cETNs sit outside Financial Services Compensation Scheme coverage, and the ban on retail cryptoasset derivatives remains in place.

FCA clears path for UK retail crypto ETF trading—kind ofFCA clears path for UK retail crypto ETF trading—kind of
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The regulator’s stance is that the market has evolved enough to permit controlled access while preserving a high-risk label for the underlying exposure.

That same logic runs through the fund proposal. Crypto ETNs have already become a live UK exchange-traded product category, with London Stock Exchange coverage describing the product segment one year after launch.

For funds, however, the wrapper creates a second layer of responsibility. Managers must decide whether a listed note is eligible and whether the exposure fits a fund’s objectives, liquidity profile, risk limits, and retail disclosures.

The FCA says fund managers should have adequate knowledge and understanding of the assets in which a fund invests, conduct due diligence on investment selection, and monitor compliance with the fund’s objective, strategy, risk limits, and liquidity profile.

It also says managers should consider whether cryptoassets and cETNs will remain liquid in stressed conditions.

The cap is the visible control. Disclosure and liquidity work may decide how usable the permission becomes.

The FCA plans to rely on existing disclosure rules for authorized funds holding cETNs. It points managers back to rules on fund objectives, investment policies, marketing communications, Consumer Duty, and risk summaries for cryptoassets and cETNs.

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