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CryptoQuant CEO Sounds Alarm: New Stablecoin Loophole Emerges as Regulators Scramble

CryptoQuant CEO Sounds Alarm: New Stablecoin Loophole Emerges as Regulators Scramble

Author:
Tronweekly
Published:
2025-05-12 13:45:00
15
2

Global watchdogs tighten the screws—just as a fresh stablecoin vulnerability surfaces. CryptoQuant’s chief spots the gap before the bureaucrats do.


The regulatory whack-a-mole continues

While G20 ministers debate frameworks, decentralized finance keeps iterating faster than paperwork. The irony? Stablecoins—meant to be the ’safe’ crypto—are now the new battleground.


A self-custody end-run?

Early data suggests issuers might leverage cross-chain bridges to bypass jurisdiction-hopping compliance. TradFi banks would kill for this kind of creative accounting.

Stay tuned. The regulators will notice this...probably by 2026.

Stablecoin

  • Governments worldwide are advancing stablecoin regulations, prompting concerns about their long-term impact on the market.
  • CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju believes that strict regulations could push the rise of dark stablecoins in the digital economy.
  • Dark stablecoins may use decentralized algorithmic systems to avoid government control and maintain censorship resistance.

Governments worldwide continue to push stablecoin regulations, driving debate on their long-term effects. The increasing dominance of regulatory ideas, such as MiCA and the proposed GENIUS Act, brings with it growing hesitancy. CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju believes regulation will shift the stablecoin market unexpectedly.

Clear legal guidelines help stablecoin issuers and users operate with more certainty and reduced risk. Rules favoring openness and following the rules organized the faith in legitimate digital tokens. However, experts now predict that excessive regulation could lead to the rise of dark stablecoins.

As global enforcement grows, new forms of decentralized stablecoins may challenge mainstream regulatory systems. They may be problematic for regulatory authorities in the context of tracking, surveillance, and management. Analysts caution that this emerging type of stablecoin threatens to transform the way that digital markets are conducted.

Algorithmic Dark Stablecoins Could Bypass Oversight

Ki Young Ju outlined one route for dark stablecoins through decentralized algorithmic protocols. Such protocols WOULD exist in a non-regulated world with no censorship. Developers could use them to establish stablecoins like USDC using Oracles such as Chainlink.

Dark stablecoins are likely to emerge in the future.#Bitcoin was created by the cypherpunk community to be censorship-resistant and belongs to no one, making it impossible to control.

Stablecoins, however, act as a bridge between the internet and the real world, so they need…

— Ki Young Ju (@ki_young_ju) May 11, 2025

Unlike traditional stablecoins that rely on fiat reserves, algorithmic stablecoins maintain value through code-based supply adjustments. Previous attempts to develop algorithmic stablecoins failed, yet there is hope that innovation will solve their stability problems. Without a single issuer, controlling and enforcing tasks is complicated and limited.

Mounting regulatory scrutiny would encourage people seeking financial anonymity to resort to such solutions. These stablecoins might appeal to users in countries with restricted access to global financial systems. Since a central authority does not regulate them, they are difficult to regulate or prohibit.

Tether’s USDT Shows Signs of Censorship Resistance

Ki Young Ju highlighted that USDT already exhibits some traits of a dark stablecoin. Tether is subject to some regulatory conditions and fairly autonomous in its operations. If U.S regulations are toughened, then USDT may run independently.

Lacking centralized authority, and since Tether is a worldwide entity, perfect oversight becomes difficult. Notwithstanding, Tether’s power of operation agility lets support users of different countries, often outside the reach of U.S. regulations. In case of necessity, the Tether model may grow in decentralization.

Speculated to MOVE away from regulatory compliance, the pressure from the authorities may rise, and Tether may advance. If so, USDT could set a precedent for semi-regulated dark stablecoins. Such a scenario could alter the way members of the market differentiate centralized and decentralized digital currencies.

CryptoQuant’s CEO noted that governments may soon impose banking-level oversight on stablecoins. Regulators may require stablecoins to enable automated tax reporting, asset freezes, and complete transaction tracking by smart contracts. Such requirements may limit users’ privacy and endanger transaction flexibility.

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