US Bank Tests Stablecoin, Further Eroding Cryptocurrency's Credibility
US Bancorp has begun testing its own stablecoin on the Stellar blockchain, a move that highlights the growing influence of traditional financial institutions in the cryptocurrency space. The pilot aims to utilize the token for faster and cheaper cross-border payments while incorporating safeguards like customer verification and transaction reversals.
The bank's senior vice president, Mike Villano, cited Stellar's suitability for traditional financial services as a key selling point for the venture. This is significant, given the growing demand for stablecoin payments from customers remains muted.
Stablecoins have emerged as the primary pitch for cryptocurrency beyond bitcoin's role as a long-term store of value and gambling in the often-rigged memecoin casino. In decentralized finance (DeFi) networks like Ethereum, which are heavily reliant on these dollar-backed digital assets, stablecoin volume drives most of the financial activity and user adoption.
However, DeFi skeptics have cautioned against leaning on stablecoins as a shortcut for user adoption, as fintech firms like Stripe, Coinbase, Robinhood, and various stablecoin operators roll out blockchains optimized for speed and ease of use at the expense of peer-to-peer financial sovereignty.
The merger between cryptocurrency, fintech, financial services companies, and traditional banks via stablecoins is accelerating. Recent examples include Klarna issuing a stablecoin on Stripe's Tempo chain, MoneyGram expanding its use of stablecoins for remittances, and Revolut rolling out fee-free, one-to-one fiat-to-stablecoin swaps.
This trend suggests that stablecoins are evolving into efficiency boosters for incumbents rather than true disruptors. The ability to freeze assets on Stellar has been described as "particularly appealing" by US Bancorp's Mike Villano, a move that flips Satoshi Nakamoto's vision of trustless, censorship-resistant money on its head.
Growing tensions between cypherpunks and those building technology for banks have boiled over in recent weeks. Ethereum Foundation researcher Dankrad Feist jumped to Tempo, prompting accusations that the space is drifting too far from decentralization towards bank-friendly infrastructure.
The stablecoin phenomenon also sheds light on the Trump administration's enthusiasm for cryptocurrency. Stablecoins can be used to extend dollar hegemony globally, as codified in the GENIUS Act signed by President Trump in July.
In contrast, the prison time given to the co-founders of Bitcoin privacy wallet Samourai Wallet has raised questions about the credibility of cryptocurrency. The former CEO of crypto exchange Binance received a pardon for similar charges, highlighting the inconsistency in the industry's approach to regulation and enforcement.
US Bancorp has begun testing its own stablecoin on the Stellar blockchain, a move that highlights the growing influence of traditional financial institutions in the cryptocurrency space. The pilot aims to utilize the token for faster and cheaper cross-border payments while incorporating safeguards like customer verification and transaction reversals.
The bank's senior vice president, Mike Villano, cited Stellar's suitability for traditional financial services as a key selling point for the venture. This is significant, given the growing demand for stablecoin payments from customers remains muted.
Stablecoins have emerged as the primary pitch for cryptocurrency beyond bitcoin's role as a long-term store of value and gambling in the often-rigged memecoin casino. In decentralized finance (DeFi) networks like Ethereum, which are heavily reliant on these dollar-backed digital assets, stablecoin volume drives most of the financial activity and user adoption.
However, DeFi skeptics have cautioned against leaning on stablecoins as a shortcut for user adoption, as fintech firms like Stripe, Coinbase, Robinhood, and various stablecoin operators roll out blockchains optimized for speed and ease of use at the expense of peer-to-peer financial sovereignty.
The merger between cryptocurrency, fintech, financial services companies, and traditional banks via stablecoins is accelerating. Recent examples include Klarna issuing a stablecoin on Stripe's Tempo chain, MoneyGram expanding its use of stablecoins for remittances, and Revolut rolling out fee-free, one-to-one fiat-to-stablecoin swaps.
This trend suggests that stablecoins are evolving into efficiency boosters for incumbents rather than true disruptors. The ability to freeze assets on Stellar has been described as "particularly appealing" by US Bancorp's Mike Villano, a move that flips Satoshi Nakamoto's vision of trustless, censorship-resistant money on its head.
Growing tensions between cypherpunks and those building technology for banks have boiled over in recent weeks. Ethereum Foundation researcher Dankrad Feist jumped to Tempo, prompting accusations that the space is drifting too far from decentralization towards bank-friendly infrastructure.
The stablecoin phenomenon also sheds light on the Trump administration's enthusiasm for cryptocurrency. Stablecoins can be used to extend dollar hegemony globally, as codified in the GENIUS Act signed by President Trump in July.
In contrast, the prison time given to the co-founders of Bitcoin privacy wallet Samourai Wallet has raised questions about the credibility of cryptocurrency. The former CEO of crypto exchange Binance received a pardon for similar charges, highlighting the inconsistency in the industry's approach to regulation and enforcement.