Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Europe's Stablecoin Pivot: The Euro Looks For Its Digital Rails


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Europe is quietly making a big strategic turn: it wants euro-denominated stablecoins to stand on their own feet, not ride on the dollar's.

The message, delivered by Pierre Gramegna of the European Stability Mechanism to euro-area finance chiefs, is simple: if most digital money moves through dollar tokens, Europe's economy ends up depending on U.S. rails.

Here's the picture. Stablecoins - crypto tokens pegged to national currencies - now total roughly $300 billion. Almost all of that is linked to the U.S. dollar. Euro-pegged coins are a rounding error by comparison, around the hundreds of millions.

That imbalance matters. It shapes where liquidity lives, who sets the rules, and how fast European companies can settle trades, pay suppliers, or tokenize assets without flipping in and out of dollars.

The timing is no accident. Washington has already put a federal rulebook around stablecoins, making dollar tokens safer and more attractive to global users.



Europe, for its part, built MiCA - its own comprehensive regime - and is now asking a sharper question: can strictly supervised euro stablecoins grow fast enough to keep more activity in euros while the European Central Bank works on a digital euro?
Europe Prepares Euro Stablecoins to Challenge Dollar Dominance
That central-bank project is real but slow; officials don't expect a launch before 2029. In the gap between now and then, euro stablecoins are the practical path - if they hold high-quality reserves, offer one-for-one redemption, and accept intrusive oversight.

Banks seem to agree: several major lenders are preparing euro-pegged tokens for potential rollouts as soon as 2026, subject to approval. The story behind the story is geostrategic. Payments are power.

If DeFi, cross-border commerce, and tokenized markets clear mostly in dollar tokens, the dollar's reach grows. Europe's shift isn't about chasing crypto hype; it's about monetary autonomy and competitiveness - giving European firms, and their partners abroad, a faster, cheaper euro option that aligns with European rules.

What to watch now: whether euro-area ministers fine-tune MiCA to help credible issuers scale, how quickly bank-backed coins come to market, and whether the digital euro timeline stays on track.

For exporters, investors, and anyone moving money across borders, those decisions will shape which currency rails the next decade runs on.

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