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Markets

Central Banks Say Stablecoins Are Strengthening Dollar Dominance

Global central-bank and policy research is increasingly converging on the same conclusion: crypto stablecoins are reinforcing U.S. dollar dominance rather than replacing fiat money. The stron

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 29, 2026
3 min read
NEWS
Central Banks Say Stablecoins Are Strengthening Dollar Dominance
CryptoCompass editorial visual for markets coverage.

Global central-bank and policy research is increasingly converging on the same conclusion: crypto stablecoins are reinforcing U.S. dollar dominance rather than replacing fiat money.

The strongest version of that argument comes from the dollar structure of the market itself. The Bank for International Settlements places roughly 98% of stablecoin value in dollar-denominated instruments, a share even higher than the dollar’s role across many older parts of international finance.

That makes USDT, USDC and other dollar-pegged tokens less of an alternative currency system and more of a private digital channel for dollar access. Users in countries with inflation, capital controls, weak banking access or expensive cross-border payments can hold and transfer dollar exposure without using traditional correspondent banking rails.

The European Central Bank has treated that trend as a direct settlement and sovereignty issue. ECB President Christine Lagarde warned that stablecoins are overwhelmingly denominated in U.S. dollars and that rapid uptake could lead to digital dollarization, where payment infrastructure and tokenized markets settle in dollars rather than local currency or euro-denominated instruments.

Treasury Demand Becomes Part Of The Stablecoin Story

The dollar-dominance link also runs through stablecoin reserves. Major fiat-backed stablecoins are supported by cash, bank deposits, Treasury bills, repo and other short-term dollar assets. As stablecoin supply grows, issuers need more reserve assets to back tokens circulating across exchanges, wallets, payment apps and DeFi markets.

The IMF’s Finance & Development analysis frames dollar stablecoins as a possible digital pillar for the dollar’s “exorbitant privilege,” because wider international adoption can raise demand for U.S. Treasuries and expand the stock of dollar safe liabilities outside the United States.

The Richmond Fed’s stablecoin dollar-demand brief makes the reserve design central. Reserve-backed stablecoins can increase demand for U.S. Treasuries, while crypto-backed stablecoins would not create the same support for dollar safe assets.

That distinction matters because the dominant stablecoins are not neutral settlement chips. USDT and USDC sit inside a reserve architecture that routes global token demand back into dollar-denominated assets. The same reserve and liquidity issue has already reached traditional finance, where BlackRock has been building tokenized money-market products aimed at stablecoin investors and cash-management flows.

Dollarization Risk Spreads Beyond Crypto Trading

Stablecoins still serve crypto trading first, but their use is moving into payments, remittances, tokenized markets and cross-border settlement. DeFiLlama’s stablecoin dashboard recently placed total stablecoin value above $312 billion, with USDT alone holding roughly 59% market dominance.

That scale is large enough for policy institutions to treat stablecoins as monetary infrastructure rather than only exchange liquidity. If households and businesses in weaker-currency economies hold dollar stablecoins for savings, payments or remittances, local monetary policy can lose traction while private issuers become gateways to dollar access.

The same dynamic is already visible in payment infrastructure. Mastercard’s Solana settlement move and other always-on stablecoin settlement projects show how digital dollars are moving behind checkout, treasury and merchant settlement systems, not only inside crypto exchanges.

The market can still contract, depeg or face liquidity stress. Recent pressure around USDT market cap showed that stablecoin supply remains a core risk signal for crypto markets. Policy institutions are now focused on the larger monetary effect: dollar stablecoins can widen access to the U.S. currency, increase demand for dollar reserve assets and deepen dollarization through private blockchain infrastructure.

The stablecoin market recently stood near $312.9 billion, with USDT supply near $184.9 billion and USDT dominance around 59%.

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