US-UK transatlantic taskforce unveils 10-point digital asset roadmap focused on stablecoins and tokenization
The joint initiative between Washington and London lays out a framework for cross-border tokenized assets and stablecoin standards, but stops short of new regulation
The US and UK just did something unusual for two governments: they actually agreed on how to handle digital assets. The Transatlantic Taskforce for Markets of the Future, known by the bureaucratically elegant acronym TTMF, released a 10-point roadmap on July 14 covering digital assets, tokenization, and stablecoins.
What’s actually in the roadmap
The TTMF was co-led by US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves. It was established in September 2025 during President Trump’s visit to the UK, and the taskforce delivered its recommendations within a 180-day timeframe.
The centerpiece is a call for a private sector-led group to run a one-year experimental phase testing various use cases for cross-border tokenized assets.
On the regulatory coordination front, four major agencies are being pulled into the effort. The Bank of England, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the Financial Conduct Authority, and the Securities and Exchange Commission will collaborate to develop common approaches on settlement finality and stablecoin eligibility.
The taskforce also issued a joint statement formally recognizing the role of stablecoins in what it calls a “multi-money ecosystem.”
Additional recommendations include collaboration between the FCA and SEC on cross-border capital raising and accounting standards.
Framework without new rules
The TTMF roadmap deliberately avoids introducing new regulatory rules. The recommendations are designed to reduce existing frictions in capital markets, not layer on additional compliance burdens.
Why this matters for crypto investors
The explicit recognition of stablecoins as part of a multi-money ecosystem gives the asset class something it has desperately needed: legitimacy from major Western financial authorities. A joint US-UK endorsement changes that calculus significantly.
The private sector experimentation framework could accelerate tokenization of traditional financial assets. If major institutions can test cross-border tokenized instruments under a coordinated regulatory umbrella, it removes one of the biggest barriers to adoption: the fear that what’s compliant in London might get you sued in New York.