The Monetary Authority of Singapore’s (MAS) consultation on its cryptoasset prudential framework has reached its deadline today, 18 May 2026, marking a critical inflection point for how banks in the world’s leading Asian financial centre will manage crypto exposure on their balance sheets.
Proposed earlier this year, the new framework introduces risk-sensitive treatment for cryptoassets held on permissionless blockchains, proposing to classify them as “Group 1 cryptoassets” under principle-based requirements with interim exposure and issuance caps. The rules would allow Singapore-based banks to hold and trade cryptoassets more directly, while subjecting them to proportionate capital and risk management requirements calibrated to the specific risk profile of each asset type.
The consultation period closes on 18 May 2026 — the very day we are reporting. Industry participants have been pressing for regulatory clarity as competition between Asian financial hubs intensifies: Hong Kong’s SFC has already enabled secondary market trading for tokenised investment products, and South Korea is advancing its own digital asset law. Singapore’s ability to move quickly from consultation to implementation could determine which hub captures institutional crypto trading volume in the region.
Notably, MAS has been comprehensive in its approach. In parallel developments, the central bank also recently concluded its consultation on enhancements to Product Highlights Sheets and the framework for complex products, effectively shifting from mandatory to optional financial advice for complex investment products while strengthening safeguards for vulnerable investor categories. Together, these moves signal a broader regulatory philosophy: Singapore is transitioning from prescriptive oversight to a risk-sensitive, disclosure-based regime that encourages innovation while maintaining investor protections.
For market participants, the immediate priority is reviewing the final consultation response — expected in the coming weeks — for any changes to the proposed capital charges, liquidity requirements, or operational resilience standards for banks handling cryptoassets. The framework’s final form will likely set the de facto standard for other ASEAN regulators looking to develop their own digital asset approaches.
Source: Monetary Authority of Singapore, “MAS Concludes Consultation on Enhancements to Product Highlights Sheets and Streamlined Framework for Complex Products,” 15 May 2026; MAS cryptoasset prudential framework consultation materials, accessible via the MAS website (consultation closes 18 May 2026).
