Bitstamp by Robinhood has secured a licence under the British Virgin Islands’ Securities and Investment Business Act, adding investment-business authorization to its growing international reg
Bitstamp by Robinhood has secured a licence under the British Virgin Islands’ Securities and Investment Business Act, adding investment-business authorization to its growing international regulatory structure.
The new SIBA licence follows Bitstamp Global Ltd.’s approval as a virtual asset service provider in the territory earlier this year. Together, the permissions give Robinhood’s exchange subsidiary a regulated BVI base spanning core digital asset services and activities that fall within the jurisdiction’s investment-business framework.
The latest approval extends Robinhood’s push to combine its retail brokerage reach with Bitstamp’s exchange infrastructure, institutional relationships and established licensing network.
SIBA Licence Adds An Investment-Business Layer
The BVI’s Securities and Investment Business Act governs regulated activities including dealing in investments, arranging transactions, investment management, custody, administration, advice and operating an investment exchange.
Bitstamp has not yet disclosed the precise SIBA categories attached to its licence. Those permissions will determine which investment products and services can be offered through the BVI entity and which customers or markets can access them.
The licence is separate from Bitstamp Global Ltd.’s existing authorization under the Virtual Assets Service Providers Act. The BVI Financial Services Commission register already permits the company to exchange crypto for fiat or other digital assets, safeguard customer assets, transfer virtual assets and provide services connected to token issuances.
SIBA brings securities and investment activity into the same regulated structure rather than treating every product as ordinary spot crypto trading.
Robinhood Builds Through Separate Regulated Entities
Robinhood completed its acquisition of Bitstamp to gain a larger international exchange operation, deeper institutional infrastructure and regulatory access outside the United States.
The BVI licence joins Bitstamp’s MiCA authorization in Luxembourg, its Major Payment Institution licence in Singapore and its U.S. state-level registrations. Each approval applies through a specific legal entity and defines where customer assets are held, which products can be offered and which regulator supervises the business.
Robinhood has followed the same entity-by-entity approach in Asia. Its Singapore expansion combines brokerage approval with Bitstamp’s existing payment licence, creating separate regulatory paths for securities and digital asset services.
Europe is developing along similar lines as exchanges compete for licences that can be passported across the bloc. The growth of MiCA-authorized providers has made licensing jurisdiction, custody structure and legal entity selection central to exchange expansion.
Bitstamp’s BVI operation now combines approved crypto exchange, custody and transfer services with a newly licensed investment-business layer. The next operational disclosure will be the exact SIBA categories granted and whether Bitstamp uses them to expand institutional execution, custody or investment products through its BVI entity.
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