Amid the US set to implement a stablecoin framework after passage of the GENIUS Act, EU officials are looking at the implications of foreign-issued stablecoins.
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Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank (ECB), is calling for policymakers to address gaps in stablecoin regulation, particularly for those issued beyond the “robust” Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework in the European Union.
In prepared remarks for the ninth annual conference of the European Systemic Risk Board on Wednesday, Lagarde EU lawmakers should take steps in situations where an entity covered under MiCA and a non-EU entity jointly issue stablecoins.
She added that such stablecoin issuers should not be allowed to operate in the EU unless there were “robust equivalence regimes” at the source, which included allowing EU investors “to always redeem their holdings at par value” and requiring issuers to fully back their coins.
“In the event of a run, investors would naturally prefer to redeem in the jurisdiction with the strongest safeguards, which is likely to be the EU, where MiCAR also prohibits redemption fees,” said Lagarde. “But the reserves held in the EU may not be sufficient to meet such concentrated demand.”
A stablecoin is a cryptocurrency by pegging it to an asset like the US dollar or the euro.
ECB policymakers have of a digital euro for years, but could be pressured by stablecoin laws and regulations pushed by the Trump administration in the US.
The US Congress establishing a framework for stablecoins, likely benefiting issuers of US-pegged coins.
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“[The US government’s policies] could potentially result not just in further losses of fees and data, but also in euro deposits being moved to the United States and in a further strengthening of the role of the dollar in cross-border payments,” ECB executive board member Piero Cipollone in April.
Amid a law set to be implemented in the US and EU policymakers considering the best path forward to address stablecoins, China at a yuan-backed coin.
Reports from August was considering a stablecoin pegged to its renminbi currency following the slow rollout of a digital yuan. As of Monday, officials had not confirmed whether the country would push for a state-issued stablecoin in response to efforts by the US to strengthen the dollar’s role.
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