Regulation
All Stablecoin Beat articles tagged “Regulation”.
Insights
Stablecoin Yield and the New Deposit War
Bank of America's Brian Moynihan warns that yield-bearing stablecoins could pull up to $6 trillion out of bank deposits, threatening deposit-funded lending. But deposits do not leave the financial system; they are reallocated into reserves, Treasury bills, repo, and money market funds. A White House analysis finds a yield ban would lift bank lending by only ~0.02 percent while costing savers, and IMF research points to the Treasury market, not deposit drain, as the more important channel. The real fight is over who captures the economics of digital cash, and the better answer is safe competition under strict prudential rules rather than a blunt yield prohibition.
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Insights
MiCA's Stablecoin Trap: Compliance, Surveillance, and Europe's Competitiveness Problem
An unresolved EBA Single Rulebook Q&A asks whether MiCA e-money token issuers must treat every holder as a client for AML purposes on an ongoing basis, including after secondary-market transfers. The answer, now pending with the European Commission, will decide whether MiCA-compliant stablecoins remain open, transferable digital money or become permissioned, surveillance-heavy e-money systems. The question applies to euro tokens such as EURC and to dollar tokens like USDC issued under MiCA, and it helps explain why Tether has stayed out. Europe's competitiveness and privacy both turn on whether obligations attach to real control points or to issuers alone.
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Insights
BIS vs Stablecoins: The Fragmentation Debate Is Back
BIS General Manager Pablo Hernández de Cos called global stablecoin cooperation critically important in April 2026. The data tells a more specific story. At $325.4 billion and an HHI of 3,995, the stablecoin market is dominated by two issuers, not dispersed across hundreds. The fragmentation that matters is legal and operational: inconsistent reserve standards, uneven redemption rights, and jurisdiction shopping across frameworks that do not yet talk to each other.
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