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#StablecoinDebateHeatsUp
The stablecoin debate has quietly crossed a point of no return. The total stablecoin market just hit a record $313 billion, and every major financial institution from BlackRock to Visa is now racing to stake a claim — which tells you more about where this is going than any policy paper ever could.
But the real fight is not about whether stablecoins are useful. Everyone agrees they are. The fight is about who controls the rails, who holds the reserves, and whether paying yield on stablecoin deposits makes you a bank whether you call yourself one or not.
The GENIUS Act in the US created a formal regulatory framework, but the Senate is now debating the CLARITY Act and the RFIA side by side — two competing visions of how tightly to box in stablecoin issuers. The core tension is almost philosophical: if a brokerage holds your stablecoins and pays you rewards on them, is that a savings account? Banks say yes. Stablecoin platforms say no. Regulators are increasingly siding with the banks on this one.
Meanwhile, the dollar's dominance inside the stablecoin ecosystem is quietly being tested. Non-dollar stablecoins crossed $1.2 billion. Euro-denominated stablecoin volume surged tenfold in Europe after MiCA took hold. Brazil's real-pegged token is doing $400 million a month in transfers. None of these numbers are threatening USDT or USDC yet, but the architecture of a multi-currency on-chain settlement layer is being built right now, mostly by people who are not making loud announcements about it.
The most interesting structural argument: regulation designed to protect consumers has, paradoxically, become the mechanism through which non-dollar stablecoins are gaining ground. By forcing exchanges to delist non-compliant USD tokens under MiCA, Europe essentially created the shelf space for local currency alternatives.
The institutions are not coming anymore. They are already here. The debate now is whether the rules will be written by people who understand how this technology actually works, or by people who are primarily trying to protect the existing banking architecture from a competitor they cannot acquire.