European Banks Launch Qivalis to Issue Euro-Pegged Stablecoin

TheNewsCrypto2026-01-24 tarihinde yayınlandı2026-01-24 tarihinde güncellendi

The association of 10 European banks has made a firm known as Qivalis to roll out a euro-pegged stablecoin, as per an announcement from the group. This step focuses on offering an alternative to U.S. dollar-denominated digital payment systems.

The participating banks comprise BNP Paribas, ING, UniCredit, Banca Sella, KBC, DekaBank, Danske Bank, SEB, Caixabank and Raiffeisen Bank International. BNP Paribas joined forces with the consortium after the original announcement, as per the group.

It is anticipated that the token will roll out in the second half of this year, pending regulatory approval and licensing, as per the consortium. An ex-CEO of Coinbase Germany, Jan-Oliver Sell, will act as chief executive of Qivalis, and Howard Davis, ex-chair of NatWest, got appointed as chair.

The Plans For Broadening

The company has planned to hire 45 to 50 employees in the upcoming two years, having 1/3rd of the positions filled so far, as per the company. In the beginning, the stablecoin will aim for cryptocurrency trading, providing near-instant, low-cost payments and settlements, and will have plans to widen use cases later, as per the consortium.

This step is followed by a quick surge, mainly in U.S. dollar-backed tokens like Tether. Euro-pegged alternatives are not unlimited in the market. Societe Generale’s SG-FORGE has 64 million euros in circulation in recent times, as per the available data.

Regulators such as the European Central Bank have elevated concerns that private stablecoins could redirect funds from regulated banking institutions and impact monetary policy.

Qivalis is looking for an Electronic Money Institution licence from the Dutch central bank and has worked with the ECB, which further supported a European-led solution to ensure strategic autonomy in payments, as per the sources close to the discussions.

Another group of banks in Europe and the US is also looking for stablecoin issuance, showing surged institutional interest in digital currencies, as per the industry reports.

Highlighted Crypto News Today:

Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse Expects Crypto Market to Reach New High in 2026

TagsEuroEuropean central bankStablecoin

İlgili Sorular

QWhat is the name of the new firm established by the 10 European banks to issue a euro-pegged stablecoin?

AQivalis

QWhich major French bank joined the consortium after the original announcement?

ABNP Paribas

QWho has been appointed as the chief executive of Qivalis?

AJan-Oliver Sell, the ex-CEO of Coinbase Germany

QWhat type of license is Qivalis seeking from the Dutch central bank?

AAn Electronic Money Institution licence

QWhat is one of the primary initial use cases planned for the new stablecoin?

ACryptocurrency trading, providing near-instant, low-cost payments and settlements

İlgili Okumalar

U.S. Government Bans Foreign Nationals from Using Fable 5, Anthropic Issues Rebuttal

U.S. Government Bans Foreign Access to Fable 5, Anthropic Issues Rebuttal On June 12th, the U.S. government ordered AI company Anthropic to immediately suspend all foreign access—including foreign nationals within the U.S. and Anthropic's own foreign employees—to its newly released Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models, citing national security concerns. This forced Anthropic to temporarily disable access to both models for all users globally, as it cannot technically differentiate user nationality at scale. The models, released just three days prior, represent Anthropic's highest public capability tier. Fable 5 is the first publicly available model from the advanced "Mythos" family, while Mythos 5 is a less-restricted version for approved cybersecurity and critical infrastructure partners. The government's directive was reportedly triggered by claims from another company that it could "jailbreak" Mythos 5, raising alarm within the Trump administration. Anthropic, in a detailed public statement, strongly challenged this rationale. The company argues the demonstrated "jailbreak" is a narrow, non-generalized technique that merely involves identifying minor, known software vulnerabilities—a capability common to other publicly available models like OpenAI's GPT-5.5 and routinely used by cybersecurity defenders. Anthropic stated it has complied with the order but disagrees with the government's standard, warning that applying it industry-wide would halt all new frontier model deployments. The company criticized the lack of a transparent, fact-based legal process and expressed confidence the situation stems from a misunderstanding. It is working to restore access and will release more technical details within 24 hours. Other Anthropic models remain unaffected.

链捕手17 dk önce

U.S. Government Bans Foreign Nationals from Using Fable 5, Anthropic Issues Rebuttal

链捕手17 dk önce

The Revelation from the Raydium Theft Incident: New DeFi Vulnerabilities Lurking in Forgotten Old Contracts

**Raydium Exploit Reveals DeFi's Hidden Risk: Forgotten "Zombie" Contracts** A recent attack on Raydium's deprecated V3 AMM pools resulted in a loss of approximately $1.34 million. The hacker exploited pools that were no longer supported by Raydium's current UI or SDK but remained fully functional and accessible on-chain. This incident highlights a critical, often overlooked category of risk in DeFi: inactive or legacy smart contracts that projects fail to properly decommission. Since March 2025, there have been at least 8 publicly reported attacks targeting such abandoned contracts, with total losses around $10.8 million. Including older pools and deprecated features, the count rises to 10 incidents with roughly $22.5 million in losses. These "zombie contracts" represent a lifecycle management failure rather than a code vulnerability, yet they are typically misclassified under general "code bug" categories in security reports, masking the true scale of the problem. The root cause is that projects often merely document a contract as "deprecated" without taking essential technical steps to secure it: withdrawing remaining assets, disabling external call functions, and implementing ongoing monitoring. These forgotten, under-monitored components become prime targets for attackers. To address this, the industry needs to recognize "zombie contracts" as a distinct risk category and establish standardized decommissioning protocols. Essential steps should include: 1) a formal retirement announcement, 2) removal of all front-end integrations, 3) withdrawal of locked assets, 4) disabling key contract functions, 5) ongoing security monitoring, 6) clear user communication, and 7) a post-mortem analysis. The value of a DeFi project lies not only in its current TVL but also in the security of its historical codebase, which has now become a new attack surface.

Foresight News2 saat önce

The Revelation from the Raydium Theft Incident: New DeFi Vulnerabilities Lurking in Forgotten Old Contracts

Foresight News2 saat önce

Robots Begin to 'Consume Data': The Hidden Production Chain from Indian Data Factories to Billion-Dollar Humanoid Robots

Robots have started to 'consume data,' driving the formation of a new industrial supply chain focused on producing training data for embodied AI. Unlike large language models, which are trained on vast internet text corpora, embodied AI models face a 'data desert' in the physical world. This has created a massive demand for first-person perspective video data (Ego Data), captured by workers wearing cameras in places like Indian garment factories. Companies like Neocambrian AI are establishing 'data factories' where workers perform standardized tasks (e.g., sorting clothes, kitchen organization) to generate thousands of hours of video. Research, such as NVIDIA's EgoScale, demonstrates that scaling this human demonstration data predictably improves robot performance, particularly for dexterous manipulation. This has validated a training path combining large-scale human data for pre-training with smaller amounts of robot-specific data for fine-tuning. The value of different data types varies significantly, forming a 'data pyramid.' The base consists of low-cost, large-scale internet and Ego Data. Higher layers include more expensive motion-capture data (e.g., from data gloves), simulation/synthetic data, and the most costly and scarce layer: real robot teleoperation data. This demand has spawned a layered ecosystem of data suppliers: low-cost data factories, motion capture and alignment specialists, robot-native teleoperation service providers, simulation data companies, and platforms aiming for data standardization. Robot companies themselves are adopting a 'layered procurement' strategy: outsourcing generic Ego Data while building in-house capabilities for robot-specific adaptation data and the critical deployment/failure data generated in real-world applications. The industry is shifting focus from hardware and basic mobility to the data pipelines required for general-purpose capability. While parallels exist to data labeling companies like Scale AI in the LLM boom, the physical complexity of robot data—involving action success ambiguity and sim-to-real gaps—requires more integrated solutions for data collection, annotation, and a continuous feedback loop. The race is on to build the data engines that will teach robots to operate reliably in the unstructured real world.

marsbit4 saat önce

Robots Begin to 'Consume Data': The Hidden Production Chain from Indian Data Factories to Billion-Dollar Humanoid Robots

marsbit4 saat önce

İşlemler

Spot
Futures
活动图片