Germany's Finance Ministry announced that the six largest economies in the European Union—Germany, France, Italy, Poland, Spain, and the Netherlands—have reached a consensus on the European Commission's proposal for unified capital market regulation. According to Foresight News, the agreement aims to reduce cross-border fund barriers and assign the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) the primary regulatory role over major market infrastructures. Additionally, the proposal seeks to expand EU regulatory oversight of crypto asset trading. The European Commission introduced this proposal in December of last year, intending to shift capital market regulatory authority from individual member states to ESMA, based in Paris. The proposal still requires agreement from the remaining 21 member countries, with Germany's finance minister anticipating the complete package to be approved by the end of 2026.