European Central Bank pushes tighter stablecoin rules and digital euro plan as U.S. rejects CBDC
ECB warns on stablecoin risks and dollar dominance
European Central Bank Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel urged strict regulation of stablecoins and the development of central bank digital currencies, saying both are needed to safeguard monetary and financial stability.
Speaking Monday at the 2026 Bank of Korea International Conference in Seoul, Schnabel said the global stablecoin market is approaching $300 billion in capitalization, driven mainly by U.S. dollar–denominated tokens. She cited data showing that Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USDC account for about 90% of all stablecoins in circulation.
Schnabel warned that such dominance could:
- heighten risks to monetary policy and financial stability, as stablecoin liquidity may not match user demand
- reinforce the global role of the U.S. dollar through network effects
- further marginalize euro‑denominated stablecoins, which currently play a minor role
She called for “structured” regulatory frameworks that allow innovation in digital finance but keep the level of safety and trust associated with central bank money.
Digital euro framed as response to stablecoin expansion
Schnabel presented the digital euro as a key tool to manage these risks. The proposed central bank digital currency would be designed for retail use and maintain public access to central bank money across the euro area.
According to her remarks and the ECB’s technical roadmap, the institution aims to be ready for a possible rollout of the digital euro by 2029, contingent on EU regulatory approval expected around 2026.
Schnabel said the digital euro could:
- support the effectiveness of monetary policy transmission
- protect financial soundness and the euro’s international role
- strengthen European autonomy by reducing dependence on non‑European payment providers
- offer a single pan‑European payment solution with legal tender status
She emphasized that implementation safeguards would be required to avoid destabilizing bank funding or disrupting the existing payment system.
Diverging paths: Europe advances CBDC, U.S. steps back
Schnabel’s comments highlight a growing policy gap between Europe and the United States on state‑backed digital money.
Last week, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent reiterated that the current administration will not proceed with a national CBDC, citing concerns including potential financial surveillance. He instead urged Congress to advance the Clarity Act, a legislative package aimed at defining regulatory responsibilities for digital assets between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
The Clarity Act, which has passed the House and is now before the Senate, is intended to create a federal framework for digital asset markets. Combined with the already approved GENIUS Act for stablecoins, it underlines a U.S. approach that favors private‑sector stablecoins and digital assets operating within clear regulatory guardrails rather than a retail digital dollar.
MiCA review puts EU stablecoin rules back in focus
In parallel with the ECB’s CBDC work, the European Union is reviewing its flagship Markets in crypto‑assets regulation (MiCA), which sets out licensing and conduct rules for crypto‑asset and stablecoin issuers across the bloc.
The European Commission opened a formal review of MiCA in May, launching a public consultation that runs through August 31, 2026. The outcome will shape how stablecoin projects and service providers operate in the EU.
In a policy note, Coinbase executive Katie Harries described MiCA as a solid baseline but called for refinements to strengthen Europe’s competitiveness in digital assets. Her proposals include:
- more flexible treatment for euro‑denominated stablecoins
- clearer access rules for decentralized finance services
- improved liquidity and reserve frameworks
- broader support for tokenization initiatives
Debate over stablecoin reserves and concentration risk
Harries also criticized draft approaches that would require 30–60% of stablecoin reserves to be held as commercial bank deposits. She argued that this could increase concentration risk by tying stablecoin stability too closely to a limited set of banks.
Instead, she suggested allowing a larger share of high‑quality sovereign bonds in reserve portfolios. According to Harries, such a shift would:
- diversify risk away from individual banks
- maintain or improve reserve safety
- potentially reduce systemic contagion channels in stress scenarios
She further proposed allowing non‑interest‑bearing user incentives such as cashback and loyalty rewards, saying these features could promote competition and innovation in payments without turning stablecoins into interest‑bearing products.
Strategic implications for digital asset markets
The combination of ECB messaging, MiCA’s ongoing review, and U.S. legislative moves points to a clear policy divergence:
- the EU is moving toward a tightly regulated environment for stablecoins, anchored by a retail digital euro and a harmonized licensing regime
- the U.S. is rejecting a retail CBDC for now and instead focusing on clarifying rules for privately issued stablecoins and other digital assets
For traders and digital asset platforms, this split sets up different operating landscapes across the Atlantic, with Europe leaning on public money and regulatory constraints, while the U.S. places more emphasis on private‑sector solutions within defined legal boundaries.
Explore how central bank money is evolving in our guide: learn about CBDCs and the digital euro.
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