Skip to main content
Home
  • About ESMA
    • Governance Structure
      • Board of Supervisors
      • Management Board
      • Senior Management
      • Joint Committee
      • CCP Supervisory Committee
      • CCP Resolution Committee
      • Joint Monitoring Mechanism
      • Standing Committees
      • SMSG
      • Board of Appeal
      • Ethics and Conflicts of interest
    • Internal Organisation
      • Strategy and Work Programme
      • Working Methods
      • Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
    • International Cooperation
    • Legal Notice and Data Protection
    • Transparency and Access to Documents
    • Agenda
    • Careers
    • Procurement Opportunities
  • ESMA's Activities
    • Investors and Issuers
      • Benchmark Administrators
      • Credit Rating Agencies
      • ESG Rating Providers
      • External Reviewers of European Green Bonds
      • Fund Management
      • Issuer Disclosure
      • Investment Services and Crowdfunding
    • Markets and Infrastructure
      • Central Counterparties
      • Data Reporting Services Providers
      • Trading
      • Consolidated Tape Providers
      • Post-trading
      • Shortening the settlement cycle to T+1 in the EU
      • Market Integrity
      • Short Selling
      • Central Securities Depositories
      • Securitisation
      • Trade Repositories
    • Risk Analysis
      • Risk Monitoring
      • Topical Analysis
      • Interactive Dashboards
    • Sustainable Finance
      • Climate benchmarks and ESG disclosure
      • CRAs and Sustainability
      • Investment Services and Fund Management
      • Sustainability Reporting
    • Digital Finance and Innovation
      • Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA)
      • DLT Pilot Regime
      • Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA)
    • Supervision and Convergence
      • Registration with ESMA
      • Investigations and Inspections
      • Supervisory Convergence Tools
      • Sanctions and Enforcement
      • Enforcement Convergence Initiatives
      • Breach of Union Law
    • New supervisory and oversight mandates
    • Data
      • Data Reporting
      • Databases and Registers
      • Data Quality and Use
      • Statistical Information
      • European Single Access Point (ESAP)
    • Listing Act
  • News & Publications
    • News
    • Documents
    • Speeches
    • Newsletter
    • Interactive Single Rulebook
    • Guidelines, Recommendations and Technical Standards
    • Peer Reviews
    • Risk Monitoring and Analysis
    • Questions and Answers
  • Investor Corner
    • Is the firm regulated?
    • Get ready to invest
    • Frauds and Scams related to ESMA Logo and ID
    • Publications for Investors
    • Product Intervention
    • Make a complaint
    • Cost of Investment Products
  • Interact With ESMA
    • Media Corner
    • Speaking Requests
    • Stakeholder Engagement
      • Stakeholder Relations
    • Consultations
    • Events
    • Whistleblowers
  • Contact & Help
    • Contact Information
    • FAQs
    • Glossary

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. News and Publications
  3. Interactive Single Rulebook
  4. MiCA
  5. Article 91 Prohibition of Market Manipulation

Article 91 Prohibition of market manipulation

1.  No person shall engage in or attempt to engage in market manipulation.

2.  For the purposes of this Regulation, market manipulation shall comprise any of the following activities:

(a) unless carried out for legitimate reasons, entering into a transaction, placing an order to trade or engaging in any other behaviour which:
(i) gives, or is likely to give, false or misleading signals as to the supply of, demand for, or price of, a crypto-asset;
(ii) secures, or is likely to secure, the price of one or several crypto-assets at an abnormal or artificial level;
(b) entering into a transaction, placing an order to trade or any other activity or behaviour which affects or is likely to affect the price of one or several crypto-assets, while employing a fictitious device or any other form of deception or contrivance;
(c) disseminating information through the media, including the internet, or by any other means, which gives, or is likely to give, false or misleading signals as to the supply of, demand for, or price of one or several crypto-assets, or secures or is likely to secure, the price of one or several crypto-assets, at an abnormal or artificial level, including the dissemination of rumours, where the person who engaged in the dissemination knew, or ought to have known, that the information was false or misleading.
 

3.  The following behaviour shall, inter alia, be considered market manipulation:

(a) securing a dominant position over the supply of, or demand for, a crypto-asset, which has, or is likely to have, the effect of fixing, directly or indirectly, purchase or sale prices or creates, or is likely to create, other unfair trading conditions;

(b) the placing of orders to a trading platform for crypto-assets, including any cancellation or modification thereof, by any available means of trading, and which has one of the effects referred to in paragraph 2, point (a), by:
(i) disrupting or delaying the functioning of the trading platform for crypto-assets or engaging into any activities that are likely to have that effect;
(ii) making it more difficult for other persons to identify genuine orders on the trading platform for crypto-assets or engaging into any activities that are likely to have that effect, including by entering orders which result in the destabilisation of the normal functioning of the trading platform for crypto-assets;
(iii) creating a false or misleading signal about the supply of, or demand for, or price of, a crypto-asset, in particular by entering orders to initiate or exacerbate a trend, or engaging into any activities that are likely to have that effect;
(c) taking advantage of occasional or regular access to the traditional or electronic media by voicing an opinion about a crypto-asset, while having previously taken positions on that crypto-asset, and profiting subsequently from the impact of the opinions voiced on the price of that crypto-asset, without having simultaneously disclosed that conflict of interest to the public in a proper and effective way.
Home
ESMA is an authority of the European Union Home
  • Careers
  • ESMA Documents
  • Contact & Help
  • Media Corner
  • Cookie Policy
  • Data Protection
Social Media