Stablecoins are still marketed as crypto’s escape from traditional finance: borderless money, always on, independent of banks.
In a recent paper, the International Monetary Fund offered a cooler read.
“The stablecoin market is increasingly built on short-term U.S. government debt, turning the “stablecoin era” into a private distribution layer for dollars, not a replacement for them,” it wrote.
The IMF’s data also shows how concentrated that layer has become. Dollar-pegged stablecoins represent 97% of issuance, and USDT and USDC account for about 90% of the market, according to the paper.
That matters because once the biggest tokens warehouse Treasury bills and Treasury-collateralized repo at scale, stablecoins start touching the same systems policymakers care about: deposit competition, money markets, cross-border flows, and financial stability.
The IMF documents a steady migration toward safer, more liquid backing assets, especially short-term U.S. Treasuries and repo structures collateralized by Treasuries.
Circle frames USDC in similar terms on its transparency disclosures, describing reserves held in cash, short-dated U.S. Treasuries, and overnight U.S. Treasury repurchase agreements, with portfolio reporting available through BlackRock.
Visa’s economic research puts numbers on the same pattern: by mid-2025, it highlighted USDC reserves heavily allocated to reverse repos and Treasury bills, with a smaller share in bank deposits.
Tether has leaned into the scale story as well. In a January 2026 update, Tether said it ended 2025 with record $141 billion exposure to U.S. Treasuries (direct and indirect) and $6.3 billion in excess reserves.
Once stablecoin reserves sit in Treasury bills and Treasury repo, the next question is whether stablecoin demand can move those markets.
A BIS working paper using daily data from 2021–2025 finds that a two-standard-deviation inflow into stablecoins is associated with a 2–2.5 basis point drop in three-month Treasury yields within about 10 days, with limited spillover to longer maturities.
It also finds asymmetric effects: outflows raise yields by more than inflows lower them.
That does not mean stablecoins “set rates.” It does suggest they are no longer just a crypto convenience. They are becoming a marginal buyer of the safest collateral in dollar finance.
If stablecoins keep scaling, heavy demand for T-bills could steepen the curve by pulling down front-end yields, while stress-driven redemptions could push yields up faster in a selloff.
That scenario depends on adoption and market structure, but it is exactly the kind of plumbing effect regulators monitor.
U.S. policy is converging on payments framing.
The GENIUS Act establishes a federal framework for “payment stablecoins,” defining issuer categories and oversight processes.
The core promise, stable value and liquidity, depends on rules around backing assets, disclosures, and supervision.
But the fight has shifted to incentives.
A White House meeting between banking and crypto groups ended without agreement, with banks pushing to restrict interest-like rewards tied to stablecoins, because “yield” is where stablecoins start competing directly with deposits.
Standard Chartered has put a headline number on the threat: it warned U.S. banks could lose up to five hundred billion dollars in deposits by 2028 if stablecoins accelerate as a mainstream cash alternative.
China is drawing a hard sovereignty line.
In a Feb. 6 joint notice, the People’s Bank of China and other agencies reiterated that crypto-related business is illegal in China and barred unauthorized issuance of offshore stablecoins pegged to the renminbi (yuan).
The move frames stablecoins as a monetary-control issue, not just a payments product.
Europe’s central bank has been unusually direct: dollar stablecoins are “reshaping global finance,” and without a response, European monetary sovereignty and financial stability could erode. The ECB also notes that the market is overwhelmingly dollar-based (it cites about 99%), while euro stablecoins remain marginal.
In other words: if stablecoins are becoming default “internet cash,” Europe worries it will be internet cash in dollars.
The IMF’s message is less about hype than taxonomy: stablecoins are increasingly Treasury-wrapped dollars on new rails, with benefits for speed and access, but with real consequences for banking competition, capital flows, and market plumbing.
The question now is not whether stablecoins “beat” the dollar. It’s who gets to operate, and regulate, the dollar’s next distribution network.
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