
The Capital Markets Authority issued a tender for real-time monitoring of Bitcoin, Ethereum and 20+ networks as it prepares to enforce the VASP Act.
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Kenya's Capital Markets Authority issued a tender on July 7 for a Virtual Assets Blockchain Analytics System. The tool is designed to monitor more than 20 blockchain networks in real time, hunting for fraud, money laundering, sanctions evasion, and terrorism financing.
The move is a concrete step toward enforcing the country's Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASP) Act. That law passed Parliament in October 2025 and took effect on November 4, 2025. No crypto platform has been licensed under it yet.
The analytics system will cover Bitcoin, Ethereum, and at least 20 additional networks. Functionally, the tool needs to screen wallets against international sanctions lists, flag suspicious transaction patterns, detect connections to darknet marketplaces, and support AML/CFT compliance protocols.
The authority is building out its technical infrastructure before the implementing regulations are even finalized. The National Treasury is still drafting those rules.
Kenya's crypto regulation isn't a single-agency affair. The VASP Act carves up oversight between two bodies. The CMA handles capital markets-related virtual asset activities. The Central Bank of Kenya takes jurisdiction over stablecoins and payment-related crypto services.
Kenya isn't operating in a vacuum. South Africa began licensing crypto platforms under its Financial Sector Conduct Authority in 2023. Nigeria, after years of outright hostility toward crypto, has been developing its own regulatory pathway through the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Companies like Chainalysis, Elliptic, and TRM Labs have been selling blockchain analytics tools to regulators and financial institutions globally for years. The US Treasury, European regulators, and Asian authorities all rely on similar systems.
For crypto businesses eyeing the Kenyan market, any platform seeking a VASP license will need to demonstrate that its operations can withstand the scrutiny of a regulator armed with chain-level surveillance tools. Larger, well-capitalized exchanges with existing compliance teams – think Binance, Coinbase, or regional players like Yellow Card – would have a structural advantage when licenses eventually become available.
With implementing regulations still being drafted by the National Treasury, whoever wins this analytics contract will likely have input into how the technical standards are shaped. The vendor selection could influence the compliance architecture for Kenya's entire digital asset industry.
Prepared with AlphaScala research tooling and grounded in primary market data: live prices, fundamentals, SEC filings, hedge-fund holdings, and insider activity. Each story is checked against AlphaScala publishing rules before release. Educational coverage, not personalized advice.