EU Regulators Clash Over Stablecoin Risks While US Doubles Down on Crypto Expansion
As US regulators aggressively push to widen their crypto oversight—because what’s a financial system without a little regulatory sprawl?—EU officials remain locked in debate over whether stablecoins are the next big threat or just another bureaucratic distraction. Meanwhile, the market shrugs and keeps trading.
The European Commission says ECB’s concerns are alarmist
However, the commission believes that there is no need to amend the rules just yet, and the region should first observe the impact of US crypto reform. They also argued that the ECB is being alarmist.
The commission reportedly said:
“The risks arising from such global stablecoins seem to be overstated and are manageable under the existing legal framework.”
The EU officials claim that ECB concerns are due to a misunderstanding of the MiCA regulation because the law was designed to address those issues. They pointed to restrictions that are already in place under MiCA and the power of the central bank to block any issuer that poses a threat to the region’s financial stability.
Meanwhile, the EU officials who spoke with Politico added that the central bank is exaggerating the risk of stablecoins to get more political support for the planned digital euro. ECB top officials have been promoting the digital euro as the solution to stablecoins risks.
Concerns about dollar-pegged stablecoins are a global issue
Meanwhile, the ECB’s concerns about dollar-pegged stablecoins are unsurprising. It reflects sentiments among several countries that believe that stablecoins spread the influence of the US and further entrench the dollar hegemony.
A Chinese economist, Zhang Ming, wrote about the potential impact of stablecoins to expand US financial power a few weeks ago. Italy’s economy minister, Giancarlo Giorgetti, also said that US stablecoin policy should attract more concerns from the EU than its recent tariffs.
The US dollar accounts for 99% of the $234 billion stablecoins market cap, with the majority of the stablecoins backed by US Treasurys. With the US legislators working on regulations that will better regulate stablecoins and extend their reach, there are concerns that the stablecoin industry could expand significantly.
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