Standard Chartered Predicts $2 Trillion Stablecoin Market by 2028 Driven by US Regulatory Clarity
In a newly released research note, Standard Chartered Bank projects that the global supply of stablecoins could surge to $2 trillion by 2028, citing recent legislative developments in the United States as a key catalyst. The bank’s analysts highlight how clearer regulatory frameworks are removing institutional barriers to adoption, potentially accelerating mainstream integration of dollar-pegged digital assets. This forecast comes as US policymakers work to establish comprehensive rules for stablecoin issuers, addressing concerns about reserve transparency and consumer protection while providing much-needed certainty for market participants.
T-Bill Powerhouses
The GENIUS Act sets out a regulatory framework that mandates fully reserved stablecoins, with a strong preference for highly liquid U.S. assets like T-bills. Standard Chartered estimates this will drive consistent and large-scale purchases of government debt as stablecoin supply expands.
According to Kendrick:
“That level of demand is enough to absorb all the fresh T-bill issuance planned during Trump’s second term.”
Unlike prior speculative growth, the bank expects stablecoin demand to be structurally tied to fiscal markets, with issuers needing to match circulating token supply with liquid reserves.
The $1.6 trillion in projected T-bill demand reflects only newly issued stablecoins under these terms, not legacy tokens or digital assets more broadly.
The report explained that shorter-term T-bills would be the optimal reserve asset to manage liquidity needs and market volatility since issuers would want to avoid a “duration mismatch.”
Boosting Dollar hegemony
According to the report, the rise of regulated, dollar-backed stablecoins may also reinforce global demand for the US dollar, particularly in countries facing currency instability or capital restrictions.
Standard Chartered argued that the ability to access tokenized dollars through blockchain rails can deepen the dollar’s international role without relying on traditional banking infrastructure.
Kendrick added that this new form of dollar export could act as a “medium-term offset against the current threat to USD hegemony,” especially in light of rising trade barriers and monetary fragmentation.
With legislation likely to align stablecoins more closely with the U.S. financial system, their influence may grow from a crypto-native tool into a CORE component of global dollar liquidity and fiscal support.