The Ukraine National Commission on Securities and Stock Market published an account of Chair Oleksiy Semenyuk's week of international meetings, framing them around the design of a postwar capital market that operates under European Union rules, attracts private investment and supports Ukraine's economic recovery. The main concrete outcome was an agreement with Germany's Federal Financial Supervisory Authority, BaFin, to expand cooperation on capital markets supervision, post-trade infrastructure, the use of data for supervision and investor protection. The update said discussions with Deutsche Borse Group moved beyond individual regulatory measures to the future architecture of Ukraine's capital market, including depository infrastructure, digital financial instruments, engagement with international index providers and readiness to operate to European standards. At Ukraine Recovery Conference 2026 in Gdansk and in a closed discussion with international investors, attention centered on how Ukraine will reduce regulatory discretion, align virtual asset regulation with the Markets in Crypto-Assets model alongside the National Bank's powers, and channel household savings into long-term investment. The commission linked those discussions to reforms already under way on virtual assets, securitisation, changes to the regulator's structure, digitalisation and modern supervisory tools, which it said form part of Ukraine's commitments to the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.