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Stablecoins Are Squeezing Banks: How Digital Dollars Threaten Deposits & Insurance

Stablecoins Are Squeezing Banks: How Digital Dollars Threaten Deposits & Insurance

Published:
2025-06-15 18:35:15
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Stablecoins create pressure on deposits and insurance

Move over, FDIC—stablecoins are rewriting the rules of financial safety nets.

Banks used to sleep easy knowing deposits were sticky and insured. Enter algorithmic dollar-pegged tokens, siphoning liquidity with 24/7 yield and zero paperwork. Suddenly, that 0.01% APY on savings accounts looks like a bad joke.

The collateral conundrum

When $150B in USDC can pivot from banks to DeFi pools in minutes, traditional deposit insurance models crack under pressure. Regulators now face a Sophie''s Choice: backstop volatile crypto instruments or watch capital flee legacy systems.

Finance''s new reality: your ''stable'' coin might be safer than your bank—at least until the next Tether audit.

Stablecoins create pressure on deposits and insurance

JPMorgan Chase analysts wrote that stablecoins are basically a digital FORM of money-market funds. In their words, “bank deposits are not ‘destroyed’ by such a change, but are simply transferred to other economic agents.”

The problem isn’t disappearance, it’s exposure. What banks end up with is more risk. And that’s where it gets messy. Researchers at the European Central Bank called it out clearly:

“Collecting deposits from stablecoin issuers transforms retail deposits that can serve as a stable source of funding for banks into volatile deposits that cannot.”

That’s what scares regulators. Because if too many people MOVE insured deposits into stablecoins, banks end up with fragile funding structures. And it’s already happened before.

In March 2023, Circle Internet Group, the company behind USDC, tried to move more than $3 billion out of Silicon Valley Bank as it was collapsing. But the transfer didn’t settle before the FDIC took over, and to make matters worse, USDC dropped below $1 on multiple exchanges, losing its dollar peg.

In its public filing, Circle confirmed that the dislocation only ended after regulators guaranteed all deposits at SVB.

The biggest banks will survive, but smaller ones will take the hit

Circle also said in its filing that it changed how it manages reserves, holding the “significant majority” of its cash with global systemically important banks, which include Bank of America, JPMorgan, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo.

These giants are built for liquidity, as they’re already required to hold enough high-quality assets to weather big swings, which gives them an edge when stablecoin issuers start moving billions around.

But smaller banks aren’t built for that. If everyday savers start using stablecoins for regular spending and short-term savings, small banks are the first to feel it. Their biggest strength, government-insured retail deposits, gets eaten away. Their main advantage becomes a weakness.

And there’s more. Some big banks are now discussing the possibility of issuing stablecoins themselves. The Wall Street Journal reported that major US banks are in early talks to jointly launch a stablecoin. That WOULD pull even more power away from smaller institutions.

If the same banks already dominating global finance start minting their own crypto-backed dollars, they won’t just be hosting reserves; they’ll be controlling the entire pipeline.

Meanwhile, the ecosystem around stablecoins is growing. People are starting to earn yield just for holding these tokens. And there’s now a market for tokenized Treasurys, meaning people can earn returns on government debt without ever touching a bank. That puts even more pressure on banks to raise their interest rates, which eats into their profits.

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