BIS Latest Research: Stablecoins and the Future of the Global Monetary Landscape

链捕手2026-06-01 tarihinde yayınlandı2026-06-01 tarihinde güncellendi

Özet

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) Working Paper No. 170 analyzes the rise of stablecoins and their impact on the global monetary system. Stablecoins, privately issued digital tokens pegged to fiat currencies, have grown exponentially since 2014, with a market dominated by USD-pegged variants like USDT and USDC. Their core function remains within the crypto ecosystem, though use in cross-border payments and as a store of value in high-inflation emerging markets is increasing. The report identifies stablecoins as a new form of offshore dollar claims, extending dollar liquidity via blockchain. Their stability depends entirely on reserve quality and market arbitrage, lacking traditional banking safeguards. In the short term, stablecoins reinforce the US dollar's dominance, posing risks to monetary sovereignty in emerging market and developing economies (EMDEs) by facilitating "digital dollarization," which can undermine local currency deposits, capital controls, and monetary policy effectiveness. The BIS outlines three potential future scenarios: 1) Niche adoption within crypto (baseline), 2) Widespread "digital dollarization" in EMDEs (high-risk), and 3) Integration of domestic currency stablecoins (ideal but challenging). Effective global regulatory coordination is crucial to manage risks like reserve transparency, cross-border spillovers, and illicit activities. The report concludes that stablecoins represent a structural force reshaping international monetary hie...

Original WorkBIS

Source丨 China Financial Case Center Compiled by丨 Xie Binbin, Qi Zhiping

With the rapid development of global digital finance, stablecoins have evolved from niche tools within the crypto sector to become new types of digital assets with cross-border payment and value storage functions, profoundly impacting the international monetary landscape. In May 2026, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) released Working Paper No. 170, systematically analyzing the development characteristics, operational mechanisms, and impact of stablecoins on the international monetary system, while proposing three future scenarios and regulatory approaches. The report concludes that stablecoins will reinforce the dominance of the US dollar in the short term, posing risks to the monetary sovereignty of emerging markets and developing economies (EMDEs). Their long-term trajectory will depend on their adoption models, regulatory responses, and synergy with the digital finance ecosystem.

Stablecoin Market: Soaring Scale, Dollar Dominance

Stablecoins are privately issued blockchain tokens pegged to fiat currencies or assets to maintain stable value, combining payment and storage functions. Since the first stablecoin emerged in 2014, the industry has grown exponentially; by 2026, there were over 300 active stablecoins globally, with a total market capitalization exceeding 3000 billion USD.

In terms of market structure, stablecoins exhibit high concentration and dollar dominance. By number, USD-pegged stablecoins account for about 64%; by market capitalization, USD stablecoins account for as high as 98%, with USDT and USDC dominating the market, while stablecoins pegged to other currencies are minimal in scale. Regarding reserve assets, mainstream fiat-pegged stablecoins use US short-term Treasury bonds, reverse repurchase agreements, and cash equivalents as core reserves. Some issuers lack sufficient transparency and auditing, still posing potential redemption risks.

Current stablecoin applications remain primarily within the crypto ecosystem, acting as the pricing and settlement medium for crypto asset trading, and as collateral in decentralized finance (DeFi) lending and liquidity protocols. Excluding high-frequency trading, wash trading, and other automated nominal volumes, the actual transaction volume is only about 1% of the nominal size. Retail scenarios (single transactions below 250 USD) account for less than 0.9%. Cross-border remittances, retail payments, and other real economy scenarios are still in the early pilot stage. However, in emerging markets with high inflation and volatile exchange rates, stablecoin cross-border flows are continuously increasing, becoming a hidden channel to evade currency depreciation and bypass capital controls.

Operational Mechanism: A New Offshore US Dollar Vehicle

Stablecoins operate on an "on-chain circulation + off-chain reserve" model: the issuer collects fiat currency at a 1:1 ratio and mints tokens, users hold them via digital wallets, and leverage public blockchains for 24/7 global transfers, with reserve assets used for redemption to maintain the peg. This model combines features of 19th century private banknotes, the Eurodollar market, and money market funds (MMF). In essence, they are on-chain private claims on offshore US dollars, extending dollar liquidity through financial innovation.

Unlike the traditional Eurodollar market, stablecoins lack bank credit elasticity and central bank liquidity support. Their stability relies entirely on the quality of reserve assets and market arbitrage mechanisms. The collapse of TerraUSD in 2022 and the temporary de-pegging of USDC in 2023 demonstrate that stablecoins without sufficient, highly liquid reserves are prone to losing their peg under stress. There is now a global regulatory consensus: focusing on regulating fiat-collateralized stablecoins and rejecting algorithmic stablecoins.

Regarding risk transmission, stablecoin reserves are heavily concentrated in US short-term Treasury bonds, creating a transmission chain of "global demand → stablecoin issuance → increased holdings of US Treasuries," directly affecting US Treasury yields and the transmission efficiency of Federal Reserve monetary policy.

Global Impact: Exacerbating Monetary Hierarchy Divisions, Challenging Monetary Autonomy in Emerging Markets

Utilizing the Cohen-Kenen international monetary function framework, the report systematically assesses the impact of stablecoins on the international monetary system from three core functions (unit of account, medium of exchange, store of value) and two sectors (private and official). The conclusions show that stablecoins have the most direct impact on the store of value and medium of exchange functions in the private sector, with limited impact on the unit of account and official sector functions, but they can implicitly constrain monetary policy autonomy.

  • 1. Store of Value: Core Channel for Digital Dollarization In high-inflation emerging markets, USD stablecoins, which require no foreign currency account and can be held cross-border anonymously, have become the preferred safe haven for residents, leading to "invisible dollarization". Stablecoin inflows are highly correlated with local currency depreciation and widening exchange rate differentials, crowding out local currency deposits and weakening central banks' regulatory capacity.

  • 2. Medium of Exchange: Enhancing Cross-Border Payment Efficiency Stablecoins offer advantages such as real-time settlement, no business hour restrictions, and low fees, and are rapidly penetrating cross-border remittance and e-commerce scenarios. Their development further reduces friction in using the US dollar, expanding its share in retail cross-border payments and e-commerce transactions.

  • 3. Unit of Account: Limited Impact, Hard to Break Commercial Inertia Trade invoicing and contract pricing have strong path dependence. Stablecoins have not yet changed the global trade pattern denominated in US dollars and euros. They are only sporadically used in some retail scenarios in high-inflation economies and have not formed systemic substitution.

  • 4. Official Sector: Indirect Constraints, No Direct Substitution Central banks have not yet incorporated stablecoins into foreign exchange reserves or as exchange rate intervention tools; the official unit of account and intervention functions have not been directly impacted. However, widespread private sector use of stablecoins can lead to ineffective capital controls and impeded monetary policy transmission, exacerbating the "trilemma": financial openness is passively increased, intensifying the conflict between exchange rate stability and monetary policy autonomy.

Three Future Scenarios: From Limited Penetration to Systemic Transformation

Based on adoption scale, regulatory environment, and cross-border impact, the report constructs three mutually exclusive yet parallel future scenarios, covering possible paths from marginal influence to reshaping the system for stablecoins.

  • Scenario 1: Niche Adoption (Baseline Scenario) Stablecoins remain confined within the crypto ecosystem, with limited penetration into the real economy. Partial holding occurs in high-inflation countries, while retail payments and trade settlement remain primarily in local currencies. Regulation focuses on anti-money laundering and consumer protection. Capital flow spillover is small, monetary sovereignty and financial stability in emerging markets are largely controllable, and central banks retain full policy autonomy. This scenario aligns closely with current market characteristics and is the most likely short-term trajectory.

  • Scenario 2: Digital Dollarization (High-Risk Scenario) USD stablecoins become the de facto standard for cross-border retail payments and domestic pricing in emerging markets, banks provide related services, and deposit dollarization accelerates. Local currency policies become ineffective, capital controls are rendered meaningless, domestic savings flow into US Treasuries via stablecoins, and the domestic credit market shrinks. Exchange rate transmission effects intensify, stablecoin run risks directly impact financial stability in emerging markets, creating irreversible digital dollar dependence. This scenario poses a far greater threat to monetary sovereignty than traditional dollarization and is an extreme risk emerging markets must guard against.

  • Scenario 3: Integration of Local Currency Stablecoins (Ideal Scenario) Through regulatory authorization, emerging markets allow licensed institutions to issue local currency stablecoins, interconnected with domestic fast payment systems and central bank digital currencies (CBDC). Reserve assets are limited to local currency government bonds and central bank deposits, balancing technological efficiency with policy autonomy. Stablecoins are used for government payments, e-commerce settlement, and securities clearing, enhancing payment efficiency and financial inclusion while avoiding foreign currency substitution risks. However, this scenario requires sound regulatory capacity, financial infrastructure, and macroeconomic stability, conditions which most low-income emerging markets currently lack.

Regulatory Challenges and Policy Implications: Global Coordination is Key

The cross-border nature of stablecoins determines that single-country regulation is difficult to be effective. The report proposes four core policy directions:

  • 1. Unify Global Regulatory Standards: Implement the Financial Stability Board (FSB) recommendations on stablecoin regulation, clarifying reserve requirements, disclosure rules, and redemption mechanisms to avoid regulatory arbitrage.

  • 2. Strengthen Cross-Border Collaboration: Establish regulatory information sharing and risk resolution mechanisms between issuing and using countries to address cross-border runs and capital flow shocks.

  • 3. Upgrade Domestic Defenses: Emerging markets should improve macroeconomic stability, optimize domestic payment systems, and advance CBDC development to counter the appeal of foreign currency stablecoins.

  • 4. Prevent and Control Illegal Activities: Utilize blockchain traceability technology to combat money laundering, terrorist financing, and other abuses, balancing innovation and risk.

In summary, stablecoins are not simple financial innovations but structural forces reshaping the international monetary hierarchy. In the short term, they may reinforce dollar hegemony and exacerbate the financial subordination of emerging markets; their long-term impact will depend on global regulatory coordination, innovation in local currency digital tools, and market adoption paths. For emerging markets, stablecoins are a double-edged sword of both opportunity and risk: they can enhance payment efficiency and promote financial inclusion, but may also trigger digital dollarization and erode monetary sovereignty.

The future global monetary system will enter a new stage of coexistence between public digital currencies (CBDC) and private digital currencies (stablecoins), and competition between fiat currencies and digital dollars. Only through sound macroeconomic policies, robust regulatory frameworks, and international coordination can we embrace the benefits of technology while safeguarding financial security and monetary sovereignty, avoiding falling into a new type of digital financial subordination.

Original Link

İlgili Sorular

QAccording to the BIS report, what is the dominant characteristic of the stablecoin market in terms of currency pegs and market concentration?

AThe stablecoin market is highly concentrated and overwhelmingly dominated by the US dollar. As of 2026, US dollar-pegged stablecoins account for 64% of the total number of stablecoins and a staggering 98% of the total market value. USDT and USDC are the dominant players, with stablecoins pegged to other currencies having minimal scale.

QHow does the BIS report describe the operational mechanism of stablecoins, and what historical financial innovations does it compare them to?

AStablecoins operate on a 'on-chain circulation, off-chain reserves' model. This mechanism is described as combining features of 19th-century private banknotes, the Eurodollar market, and money market funds (MMFs). Essentially, they represent a private claim on US dollars in an offshore context, extended onto the blockchain as a new form of liquidity.

QWhat is the 'high-risk scenario' (Scenario 2) outlined in the BIS report regarding the future of stablecoins?

AThe high-risk scenario, termed 'Digital Dollarization,' describes a situation where US dollar stablecoins become the de facto standard for cross-border retail payments and domestic pricing in emerging markets. This leads to accelerated dollarization of deposits, renders domestic monetary policy and capital controls ineffective, and could cause domestic savings to flow into US Treasuries via stablecoins, shrinking local credit markets. It poses an extreme threat to monetary sovereignty.

QAccording to the report, what is the 'ideal scenario' (Scenario 3) for emerging markets to mitigate risks from foreign currency stablecoins?

AThe ideal scenario is the 'Integration of Local Currency Stablecoins.' This involves emerging markets authorizing licensed institutions to issue local currency stablecoins. These would be interoperable with domestic fast payment systems and CBDCs, with reserve assets restricted to local currency bonds or central bank deposits. This approach aims to harness technological efficiency while preserving monetary policy autonomy and avoiding foreign currency substitution risks.

QWhat are the four core policy directions recommended by the BIS report to address the challenges posed by stablecoins?

AThe four core policy directions are: 1) Unify global regulatory standards (implementing FSB recommendations). 2) Strengthen cross-border cooperation for information sharing and risk management. 3) Upgrade domestic defenses in emerging markets (improve macroeconomic stability, domestic payment systems, and CBDCs). 4) Prevent illicit activities by leveraging blockchain traceability to combat money laundering and terrorist financing.

İlgili Okumalar

From Parallel Finance to Mainstream Finance: The On-Chain Securities Era Ushers in a Historic Window

From Parallel Finance to Mainstream: The Dawn of On-Chain Securities For over a decade, the crypto industry has operated as a parallel financial system with its own currencies, markets, and assets—from Bitcoin and ICOs to DeFi, NFTs, and memecoins. Despite building a robust internal ecosystem, a wall has separated it from the traditional financial world. That barrier is now crumbling. The industry's first act was one of internal evolution: ICOs streamlined fundraising, DeFi recreated financial services on-chain, and layer-2 networks competed for scalability—all within the crypto bubble. While innovative, this cycle remained closed, with capital and users circulating internally, leading to volatile boom-bust cycles. Even Bitcoin ETFs, while attracting Wall Street capital, merely provided a channel to buy crypto assets without bridging the systems. The next, larger narrative is Real-World Assets (RWA) moving on-chain. This involves tokenizing stocks, bonds, funds, and future cash flows. Blockchain can compress the complex traditional processes of trading, settlement, clearing, and custody into a seamless, automated network operating in seconds. This shift is creating a new financial gateway: the native crypto securities broker. This entity will combine functions of an exchange, broker, bank, and custodian into a unified global financial operating system. Consequently, the next major battleground won't be the "public chain wars" focused on speed and cost, but the competition to build the financial infrastructure capable of hosting high-quality, liquid real-world assets. Access to global equities, index funds, or stakes in companies like SpaceX could erase the boundary between crypto and traditional finance, unlocking a market orders of magnitude larger than crypto's current valuation. In summary, after years of creating a separate financial world, crypto's next decade will be defined by its integration into the existing global financial system, marking the true beginning of its largest growth story.

marsbit11 dk önce

From Parallel Finance to Mainstream Finance: The On-Chain Securities Era Ushers in a Historic Window

marsbit11 dk önce

Wang Chuan: When the Neighbor Old Wang Made 30x on Memory Stocks, How to Avoid Anxiety (Part Six) - The Trap of Commoditized Goods

Wang Chuan: When the Neighbor Lao Wang Made 30x on Storage Stocks, How to Stay Anxiety-Free (Part 6) - The Trap of Commoditized Goods. This essay uses historical and current examples to analyze the cyclical and high-risk nature of the data storage industry. It begins with the 1990s rise and dramatic fall of Iomega, whose stock soared over 160x in 18 months before collapsing 97% from its peak, illustrating the fleeting success of storage "meme stocks." The core problem is that storage products, like DRAM and flash memory, are highly commoditized. This leads to extreme volatility: prices have plummeted over 80% multiple times, and company stocks often crash 95% or go bankrupt. The industry's dynamic is defined by "elastic demand facing heavy-asset, long-cycle, rigid supply." When demand spikes and supply is fixed, prices skyrocket, as seen recently with AI-driven demand for High Bandwidth Memory (HBM). Companies like Sandisk and Micron have reported massive revenue and gross margin jumps (e.g., Sandisk's gross margin rising from 22.5% to 78.3%) despite minimal increases in production volume. However, these high margins are self-defeating. They incentivize massive new capacity investments (hundreds of billions planned from 2026), with supply expected to surge by late 2027. Once new supply meets demand, prices and profits will crash, potentially leading to a scenario where "selling more results in earning less." The article debunks the safety of long-term supply agreements, comparing them to fragile non-aggression pacts easily broken when market conditions shift. It warns that when an industry is highly profitable but trades at low P/E ratios, the risk is greatest, as plummeting prices quickly erase those earnings. Multiple asymmetric risks loom, including economic recession, reduced AI spending, faster-than-expected capacity expansion (especially from Chinese firms), and technological innovations that reduce memory requirements. In conclusion, the storage sector is a cyclical trap where periods of euphoric profits are often precursors to devastating downturns, luring unprepared investors into a "wealth incinerator."

marsbit20 dk önce

Wang Chuan: When the Neighbor Old Wang Made 30x on Memory Stocks, How to Avoid Anxiety (Part Six) - The Trap of Commoditized Goods

marsbit20 dk önce

Wang Chuan: When the neighbor Lao Wang earned thirty times from investing in memory storage stocks, how can you still avoid anxiety (6) - The trap of homogeneous products

The article, "Wang Chuan: How to Remain Unanxious After Neighbor Lao Wang's Thirty-Fold Gain on Storage Stocks (Part 6) - The Trap of Commoditized Goods," analyzes the cyclical and perilous nature of the data storage industry through historical and current case studies. It begins with the example of Iomega, whose Zip drives led to a stock surge of over 160x in the mid-1990s before collapsing over 97% from its peak due to competition from cheaper CD-R technology. This pattern is characteristic of storage, where products like DRAM are highly commoditized, leading to extreme price volatility. The sector has seen prices crash over 80% multiple times, with companies often facing bankruptcy. The core dynamic is "elastic demand facing heavy-asset, long-cycle, rigid supply." High prices attract new capacity, but the long lead time means supply eventually overshoots, causing sharp price corrections. The current AI-driven boom, exemplified by surging demand for High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM), has led to skyrocketing prices and profit margins for companies like SanDisk and Micron, despite relatively flat production volumes. However, the author warns this high-margin environment is self-defeating. The high profits are already triggering massive new capacity investments (hundreds of billions starting 2026), with supply expected to ramp up by late 2027. When supply catches up, total revenue and profits may fall even as more units are sold. Long-term supply agreements offer little protection, as buyers can find ways to renegotiate if market prices drop, similar to fragile political treaties. Key risks include economic downturns, cuts in AI spending, faster-than-expected capacity expansion (especially from Chinese firms), and innovations in chip/algorithm design that reduce memory needs. A critical trap is that at the cycle's peak, storage stocks often appear cheap with low P/E ratios, luring value investors just before an impending downturn where profits evaporate. The conclusion cautions that for commoditized goods like storage, high margins inevitably destroy themselves, and the current asymmetry favors downside risk over further upside. The neighbor's dream of easy wealth from storage stocks is portrayed as a precarious illusion.

链捕手38 dk önce

Wang Chuan: When the neighbor Lao Wang earned thirty times from investing in memory storage stocks, how can you still avoid anxiety (6) - The trap of homogeneous products

链捕手38 dk önce

AI PCs Are Here, Going Toe-to-Toe with 120B Models Locally! NVIDIA Redefines the "Personal AI Computer" Foundation with RTX Spark

NVIDIA has redefined the "AI PC" standard with the launch of the RTX Spark super chip at GTC 2026. Boasting 1 petaflop (1000 TOPS) of AI performance, it dwarfs the 45-50 TOPS NPUs in current AI PCs. The SoC features a Blackwell GPU, a 20-core Arm CPU co-designed with MediaTek, and crucially, up to 128GB of unified memory shared between CPU and GPU. This architectural shift enables local execution of 120-billion-parameter large language models with million-token context windows, a massive leap from the 9B-40B models typical on current consumer hardware. Beyond AI, use cases include 12K video editing and high-fps ray-traced gaming. Key to enterprise adoption is a security collaboration with Microsoft. Windows security is upgraded, and NVIDIA's OpenShell sandbox runtime is integrated to safely contain AI agent actions. Major software support comes from Adobe, which announced a deep,底层-level rewrite of Photoshop and Premiere to leverage the unified memory for up to 2x performance gains. Six OEMs, including Dell, HP, Lenovo, and Microsoft Surface, will release RTX Spark-based轻薄本 and compact desktops this fall. However, questions remain about real-world performance,功耗, thermal management in laptops, pricing, and the actual impact of the OpenShell sandbox. The RTX Spark represents a fundamental power shift in the PC industry, moving from an x86 CPU-centric model to a GPU-centric SoC platform, but its ultimate success hinges on the upcoming product rollouts and ecosystem validation.

marsbit52 dk önce

AI PCs Are Here, Going Toe-to-Toe with 120B Models Locally! NVIDIA Redefines the "Personal AI Computer" Foundation with RTX Spark

marsbit52 dk önce

İşlemler

Spot
Futures
活动图片