“Approval-In-Principle Not Full Licence” — SEC Admits Seven Digital Asset Firms Into Regulatory Incubation Programme

The Securities and Exchange Commission has admitted seven digital asset companies into its Accelerated Regulatory Incubation Programme, a framework designed to bring crypto and blockchain operators under formal oversight without immediately granting full operating licences.

The incubation model allows Nigeria’s capital market regulator to test these operators in real market conditions before deciding on full authorisation, the digital asset watchdog said on its website on Friday.

The commission revealed that the firms had been granted approval in principle, enabling them to operate within defined limits while undergoing assessment for compliance with regulatory, governance and risk management standards.

The companies admitted into the programme are Bitbarter Technologies Limited, Luno Fintech Nigeria Limited, GetEquity Limited, Koinkoin Global Network Limited, Wrapped CBDC Ltd, Trovotech Ltd and Blockvault Custodian Ltd.

The SEC said the incubation scheme forms part of its broader effort to formalise Nigeria’s fast-growing digital asset sector, which has expanded despite periods of regulatory uncertainty and previous restrictions on financial institutions’ exposure to cryptocurrencies.

Under ARIP, participating firms are allowed to operate in a supervised environment while the regulator evaluates their operations, including asset custody practices and safeguards against fraud, market abuse and operational failures.

“These entities would receive the Commission’s approval-in-principle, permitting them to operate within the defined scope of the Programme and subject to conditions stipulated by the Commission. An approval-in-principle confirms that an entity has satisfied the Commission’s admission requirements for the Programme,” the regulator said.

The commission stressed that approval-in-principle does not constitute a full licence and should not be interpreted as regulatory endorsement. Final authorisation will depend on firms meeting additional conditions during the incubation process.

The latest admissions build on the SEC’s earlier inclusion of Quidax and Busha in August 2024, signalling a continued push to establish a structured licensing pathway for digital asset service providers in Nigeria.

The regulator said it remains committed to supporting innovation that enhances efficiency, transparency, financial inclusion and sustainable growth in the capital market.

“Through initiatives such as ARIP, the SEC continues to encourage responsible technological advancement alongside investor protection guardrails and market discipline,” it said. “Members of the investing public are strongly advised to verify the regulatory status of anyone promoting investment products or services through the Commission’s official channels before engaging.”

Nigeria’s tightening of oversight in the crypto sector follows the exit of Binance from the country, a development widely seen as a turning point in enforcement actions against digital asset platforms. Authorities had previously accused Binance of contributing to pressure on the naira, allegations that intensified scrutiny of crypto trading activity and accelerated regulatory reforms.

Since then, regulators have moved to strengthen oversight through stricter registration requirements, re-registration of operators, and tighter licensing conditions aimed at bringing all market participants under formal supervision.

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