E-Money Licence

Definition

A regulatory authorisation permitting a firm to issue electronic money — digitally stored monetary value representing a claim on the issuer. In the UK, e-money licences are granted by the FCA under the Electronic Money Regulations 2011. Licence holders must maintain safeguarded client funds, meet initial capital requirements, and comply with ongoing prudential and conduct-of-business standards.

Complementary Terms

Concepts that frequently appear alongside E-Money Licence in practice.

Fintech Licence

A regulatory authorisation granted to financial technology companies permitting them to offer specific financial services such as payments, lending, investment management, or insurance. Licencing requirements vary by jurisdiction and activity — in the UK, the FCA regulates fintech firms under frameworks including the Payment Services Regulations, the Electronic Money Regulations, and the FCA Regulatory Sandbox.

Open Source Licence

A legal framework that governs the use, modification, and distribution of open source software, defining the rights and obligations of users and contributors. Key licence types include permissive licences (MIT, Apache 2.0, BSD) that allow broad commercial use with minimal restrictions, and copyleft licences (GPL, AGPL) that require derivative works to be released under the same terms.

Regulatory Approval (as Intangible Asset)

The authorisation granted by a government or regulatory body permitting a company to manufacture, market, or sell a product or service in a specific jurisdiction. Regulatory approvals — including drug approvals (FDA, EMA), financial service licences (FCA, MAS), telecommunications licences, and environmental permits — are recognised as contract-based intangible assets in purchase price allocations under IFRS 3 and ASC 805 when they arise from contractual or legal rights.

Payment Processing

The end-to-end handling of electronic payment transactions from initiation through authorisation, clearing, and settlement. Payment processing involves multiple parties — merchants, payment gateways, acquiring banks, card networks, issuing banks, and payment processors — coordinating in real time to validate, authorise, and settle funds.

FDA Clearance

The regulatory authorisation granted by the US Food and Drug Administration permitting a medical device to be marketed in the United States, typically through the 510(k) premarket notification pathway for devices that are substantially equivalent to an existing legally marketed device. FDA clearance is distinct from FDA approval (required for higher-risk Class III devices via the Premarket Approval pathway) and represents a significant regulatory intangible asset.

Cost of Capital (WACC)

The weighted average cost of capital, representing the blended rate of return a company must earn on its assets to satisfy both debt holders and equity investors. WACC is used as the discount rate in DCF valuations and as a hurdle rate for investment decisions.

Issuing Bank

A financial institution licensed by card networks to issue payment cards (credit, debit, or prepaid) to consumers and businesses. The issuing bank extends credit or provides access to deposited funds, bears the cardholder's credit risk, and receives interchange fees on each transaction.

Data Sovereignty

The principle that data is subject to the laws and governance structures of the country in which it is collected or stored. Data sovereignty requirements affect cloud computing architecture, cross-border data transfers, and vendor selection, particularly in light of GDPR restrictions on transfers to countries without adequate data protection standards.

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