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Stablecoins could suck US$1 trillion from emerging-market banks in next three years: Standard Chartered

by Sarkiya Ranen
in Technology
Stablecoins could suck US trillion from emerging-market banks in next three years: Standard Chartered
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[LONDON] The boom in US dollar-backed stablecoins, helped by President Donald Trump’s crypto policies, could suck US$1 trillion worth of deposits out of emerging economy banks in the next few years, a report from Standard Chartered estimates.

About 99 per cent of all stablecoins are pegged to the US dollar, which economists say effectively makes them US dollar-based bank accounts and increasingly attractive in parts of the world prone to currency crises.

Standard Chartered, a bank renowned for operating in developing economies, said the desire to avoid savings being wiped out will drive individuals and companies to put their money into stablecoin wallets instead of banks.

“We see the potential for US$1 trillion to leave emerging market banks and move into stablecoins in the next three years or so,” the bank’s report published on Monday (Oct 6) said.

While new US crypto laws aim to mitigate deposit flight by prohibiting US-compliant stablecoin issuers from paying direct yields – the equivalent of an interest rate on a bank account – Standard Chartered said that emerging market populations will still want them.

“Return of capital matters more than return on capital,” the bank said, estimating that current trends point to the use of stablecoins as savings across developing economies jumping to US$1.22 trillion by the end of 2028, from around US$173 billion now.

While a large number in absolute terms, its analysts stressed that would still represent just 2 per cent of bank deposits in the 16 countries they deem at “high-risk” of this kind of deposit flight.

They include Egypt, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka which have all suffered currency crashes in recent years, Kenya and Morocco and heavyweight emerging economies such as Turkey, India, China, Brazil, South Africa.

“Many of them, with the key exception of China, have twin deficits that leave them relatively vulnerable to global risk aversion and sudden sharp currency depreciation,” the report said. REUTERS



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Tags: BanksCharteredemergingmarketStablecoinsStandardSuckTrillionUS1Years
Sarkiya Ranen

Sarkiya Ranen

I am an editor for Ny Journals, focusing on business and entrepreneurship. I love uncovering emerging trends and crafting stories that inspire and inform readers about innovative ventures and industry insights.

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