Skip to content
Stack BTC
OrganisationGB

Stack BTC

UK cryptocurrency investment platform; subject of Lib Dem FCA complaint over Nigel Farage's £215,000 stake and promotional role.

Last refreshed: 15 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Will the FCA investigation into Farage's Stack BTC stake produce findings before the 7 May election?

Timeline for Stack BTC

#415 Apr

Used Farage in promotional material while he held a personal financial stake in the company

UK Local Elections 2026: Lib Dems ask FCA to probe Farage crypto stake
View full timeline →
Common Questions
What is Stack BTC and what is Nigel Farage's connection to it?
Stack BTC is a UK Cryptocurrency investment platform. Farage holds a £215,000 personal stake worth approximately 6% of the company and appeared in promotional material claiming a £2m bitcoin purchase on its behalf.Source: CoinTelegraph
Is there an FCA investigation into Nigel Farage's crypto investment?
The FCA confirmed it will review a 14 April 2026 letter from Lib Dem deputy leader Daisy Cooper requesting a formal investigation. No investigation has been formally announced.Source: CoinTelegraph
How is Stack BTC different from the Reform UK Radom Pay crypto scandal?
Stack BTC involves Farage's personal stake and potential market abuse under financial services law (FCA jurisdiction). Radom Pay is a Polish donation processor involving Reform UK's party finances under electoral law (Electoral Commission jurisdiction).Source: Lowdown

Background

Stack BTC is a UK Cryptocurrency investment platform that became a political issue in April 2026 when Liberal Democrat deputy leader Daisy Cooper wrote to FCA chief executive Nikhil Rathi requesting an investigation into Nigel Farage's involvement with the firm. The complaint alleges that Farage held a £215,000 personal stake worth roughly 6% of the company while appearing in promotional material claiming a £2m bitcoin purchase on the firm's behalf, a potential conflict of interest and market abuse under the Financial Services and Markets Act. The FCA confirmed it would review the letter.

The Stack BTC complaint opens a second Cryptocurrency regulatory front separate from the Electoral Commission's investigation into Reform UK's party donation payments via Radom Pay, a Polish crypto processor. The Electoral Commission's concern is party finance law; the FCA's potential concern is personal market conduct under financial services regulation. Stack BTC is a UK-registered company and falls within the FCA's jurisdiction, unlike Radom Pay, which operates from Poland.

Spotlight on Corruption, an anti-corruption research NGO, identified three enforcement gaps in the UK crypto donations regime on 1 April 2026, including the difficulty of tracking crypto-to-fiat conversions and direct personal donations to MPs. The Stack BTC case adds a personal market conduct dimension to the existing party finance questions.