Stablecoins just hit a record $322 billion

Oluwapelumi Adejumo


The global stablecoin market has climbed to a record $322 billion valuation, cementing the rise of digital dollars as one of the cryptocurrency sector’s most viable commercial products.

The milestone reflects an accelerating demand for real-time settlement, borderless cross-border transfers, and reliable dollar access on blockchain rails.

However, this expansion is also intensifying anxieties within the traditional banking sector, where these privately issued tokens are increasingly viewed as a direct threat to core deposits, payment relationships, and the legacy plumbing of global commerce.

As a result, the friction is driving a fundamental restructuring of digital finance. As stablecoin issuers expand under newly established federal frameworks, a parallel defensive-offensive is unfolding: global banks are quietly deploying tokenized deposit systems that already route trillions of dollars annually through blockchain-based infrastructure.

Stablecoin market moves deeper into finance

Over the years, stablecoins have evolved from a niche crypto-trading refuge into a settlement layer that threatens to disintermediate traditional banks.

While dollar-pegged tokens originally gained traction as a volatility hedge for digital asset traders, they are now gaining a foothold in global remittances, merchant settlements, and cross-border corporate flows.

Despite this commercial expansion, the market remains heavily top-heavy. Tether (USDT) and Circle (USDC) maintain a powerful duopoly, controlling more than 80% of the circulating supply, with USDT alone accounting for nearly 59%.

Top Stablecoins by Market CapTop Stablecoins by Market Cap
Top Stablecoins by Market Cap (Source: DeFiLlama)

Meanwhile, a similar chokepoint exists at the network level, where Ethereum and Tron process the vast majority of outstanding token balances.

Yet that structural concentration is not deterring major traditional financial players from building on alternative, high-throughput rails to capture market share.

For context, Western Union recently launched USDPT, a US dollar-denominated payment stablecoin issued by Anchorage Digital Bank on the Solana network. Fully backed by bank deposits and short-dated Treasury bills, the token represents a deliberate push to route global money transfers through digital-asset infrastructure rather than legacy correspondent banking systems.

This pivot places Western Union alongside a growing cohort of payments companies, such as Payoneer, that treat stablecoins as essential commercial plumbing rather than speculative instruments.

For remittance firms and fintechs, the appeal is undeniable: blockchain rails offer round-the-clock settlement, bypass sluggish legacy intermediaries, and provide immediate dollar liquidity to markets struggling with unreliable local currencies.

This utility has transformed stablecoins into one of the most concrete commercial successes in the digital asset sector.

While the current market size remains a fraction of global commercial banking, aggressive forecasts project that stablecoin adoption could scale into a multitrillion-dollar sector by the end of the decade if fintechs fully integrate digital dollars into everyday financial flows.

Even at their current scale, hundreds of billions of dollars in tokenized balances are already large enough to influence US Treasury demand, dictate exchange liquidity, and force a defensive rethink across Wall Street.

As stablecoins move deeper into mainstream finance, their impact is no longer contained within the cryptocurrency ecosystem; they are now the center of a high-stakes policy fight over who will control the future of global digital money.

Regulation turns stablecoin growth into a bank threat

This rapid growth has revived a historic critique within economic policy circles: privately issued money expands aggressively during market upturns but risks triggering systemic crises if collective confidence fractures.

A recent Wall Street Journal analysis framed the stablecoin boom through this precise historical lens, warning that these tokens could replicate the vulnerabilities of 1800s-era “private money,” where unregulated issuers chased yield at the expense of depositor safety.

The underlying concern is that private issuers are inherently incentivized to maximize circulating supply and optimize reserve returns, potentially creating liquidity mismatches during periods of severe market contraction.

The digital asset sector is pushing back strongly against this characterization. Faryar Shirzad, Chief Policy Officer at Coinbase, points out that private money already underpins the modern US financial system, noting that commercial bank deposits and money market fund shares comprise roughly 90% of the M2 money supply.

From this perspective, the relevant regulatory question is not whether an asset is publicly or privately issued, but whether its structural guardrails accurately match its unique risk profile.

This argument has gained significant legal footing under the federal GENIUS Act framework. The legislation introduces a purpose-built architecture for payment stablecoins, while mandating strict reserve segregation, monthly independent attestations, and direct federal oversight.

The legislation also requires issuers to back circulating tokens 1:1 with exceptionally safe, liquid assets such as cash, short-dated US Treasuries, and Federal Reserve-eligible repurchase agreements.

This statutory framework has created a sharp operational divide between stablecoin issuers and commercial banks, with the latter allowed to accept deposits to extend credit, manage complex maturity transformations, use leverage, and generate fractional-reserve money.

On the other hand, the regulated stablecoin issuers function strictly as full-reserve transaction vehicles, prohibited from lending or leveraging reserve assets and structurally mitigating the “reach for yield” that historically triggered money-market disruptions.

Despite these legal separations, commercial banks view the expansion of stablecoins as an existential balance-sheet threat.

When an enterprise or retail client exchanges fiat currency for a third-party stablecoin, that liquidity is effectively drained from the traditional banking system.

This shifts the financial relationship from a heavily regulated deposit institution to a non-bank digital issuer, costing the bank access to vital payment data, transaction fees, and, most critically, low-cost funding.

As a result, Wall Street has increasingly mounted a direct technological counteroffensive against the emerging industry.

Banks build a $4 trillion on-chain counterweight

To protect their balance sheets from this nonbank disintermediation, traditional financial institutions are moving aggressively onto the blockchain with their own alternative: tokenized deposits.

A tokenized deposit updates the technical form factor of a traditional bank account by placing deposit liabilities directly onto blockchain rails.

Instead of a corporate treasury department offloading cash to a third-party crypto wrapper like USDT or USDC, the customer retains their deposit relationship with a regulated commercial bank.

Tokenized DepositsTokenized Deposits
Tokenized Deposits (Source: McKinsey)

The client captures the fundamental operational advantages of blockchain technology, such as smart-contract programmability, near-instant settlement finality, and automated reconciliation, while keeping their capital securely inside the established banking perimeter.

This structural architecture provides commercial banks with a powerful competitive advantage. Because tokenized deposits are simply traditional bank liabilities represented on a ledger, they automatically inherit existing legal, regulatory, and clearing frameworks.

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