PayPal CEO Reveals Why Stablecoins Won’t Go Ballistic in 2025 (Yet)
Stablecoins: the crypto world’s ‘safe bet’ still waiting for its breakout moment. PayPal’s top exec just poured cold water on hype—here’s the real talk.
The Regulatory Speed Bump
Even in 2025, governments can’t decide if stablecoins are the next dollar or a digital Trojan horse. PayPal’s CEO cites ‘chessboard politics’ slowing adoption.
Liquidity Mirage
Billions in daily volume? Sure. But peel back the layers—most trades are crypto-to-crypto, not buying coffee or payroll. Real-world utility? Still a ‘coming soon’ sign.
The Institutional Cold Shoulder
Wall Street loves blockchain… when it’s wrapped in an ETF. Untethered stablecoins? ‘Too spicy’ for risk committees still nursing 2022 PTSD.
Funny how the ‘stable’ asset class moves at the speed of bureaucracy. Maybe by 2030—if the banks don’t kill it with ‘innovation’ first.
PayPal Sees Cross-Border Payments as Key to Stablecoin Adoption
While the company remains bullish on the long-term future of stablecoins, Chriss noted that most users today rely on them for international transfers, not everyday payments.
“The first use cases are most likely to be cross-border transactions,” he said. “When you’re moving money and paying large fees, there’s an opportunity to offer a fast, secure and inexpensive mode of currency.”
PayPal made headlines in 2023 as the first major US financial services firm to launch a stablecoin. Since then, the firm has quietly positioned itself to benefit from growing demand for blockchain-based payment solutions, even as much of the sector continues to focus on trading activity.
With SEC Inquiry Closed, PayPal Eyes Future Under New Stablecoin Framework
The regulatory landscape is also evolving. Last week, the US Senate passed the GENIUS Act, a bipartisan bill that establishes a legal framework for payment stablecoins.
If signed into law, it WOULD require one-to-one reserve backing, prohibit interest-bearing tokens, and impose anti-money laundering and consumer protection rules.
“We were a big part of the GENIUS Act,” Chriss said. “We were helping shape that.”
The bill, which passed the Senate by a 68-30 vote, creates a dual regulatory system — federal oversight for large issuers and state-level pathways for smaller players. PayPal, given its size, would likely fall under federal scrutiny.
Chriss’ comments also follow a decision by the US SEC to drop its investigation into PayPal’s stablecoin, PYUSD. The agency closed the inquiry without enforcement action earlier this year, removing a cloud of uncertainty for the company.
As interest in blockchain-based finance deepens, Chriss believes the key to unlocking consumer adoption lies in making crypto as intuitive and rewarding as existing payment platforms.