WSJ: Stablecoins essentially belong to "private currency" and may pose risks to the financial system

By: rootdata|2026/05/27 04:45:01
0
Share
copy

The Wall Street Journal published an article pointing out that although the GENIUS Act and the CLARITY Act are promoting the compliance of stablecoins, the essence of stablecoins still belongs to "private currency," which may pose structural risks to the financial system.

The article notes that stablecoins aim to combine the stability of the US dollar with the efficiency of blockchain payments, but because they operate on fragmented, privatized infrastructure, they do not possess the unity of the traditional US dollar system. Although USDT and USDC are pegged to the dollar, their prices may still deviate from 1 dollar.

In addition, there is an incentive for stablecoin issuers to enhance returns by allocating high-risk, low-liquidity assets. If the value of these related assets declines, it could trigger de-pegging and concentrated redemption risks. The article cites Chainalysis data stating that stablecoins account for 84% of illegal activities in cryptocurrency, mainly involving sanctions evasion and money laundering, while real economic payment scenarios account for less than 1%.

The Wall Street Journal believes that stablecoins are replaying the path of private currency experiments from the "Free Banking Era" in 19th century America, and in the future, they may need to accept stricter regulation like banks and integrate more deeply into the central bank system.

-- Price

--

You may also like

Morning Report | Strategy sold 32 BTC and over 800,000 shares of MSTR last week; Binance officially announced its U.S. stock trading portal; Polymarket reached an exclusive partnership with OneFootball

Overview of Important Market Events on June 1st

Zhou Hang: How much is SpaceX really worth?

Great companies do not equal good stocks: A deep analysis of why SpaceX's $1.75 trillion IPO valuation may contain a $1.25 trillion bubble, and retail investors should avoid blindly chasing "story premiums."

IOSG: From Coinbase to Upbit: How a Token Completes a 28-Day Journey of Taking Over

The IOSG report indicates that by 2026, the listing of tokens on first-tier exchanges has formed a highly structured path where Coinbase and ByBit are responsible for initial discovery, Binance quickly verifies and confirms, and Korean exchanges provide liquidity at the end.

Exclusive Interview with Alpaca CEO: What is the background of the US stock underlying service provider behind Binance and Bitget?

Binance and Bitget's underlying service provider in the US stock market, Alpaca, has entered the unicorn club with its "AWS of Finance" model, currently holding 94% of the tokenized US stock market share and is accelerating the transformation of global on-chain financial infrastructure.

Variant: Three types of L1 assets are highly likely to become the main means of value storage

The basic judgment factors include: technical durability, resistance to censorship, scarcity, economic productivity, etc.

Does the performance on Perp DEX become an "invisible threshold" and "amplifier" for new coins to go live on CEX?

The liquidity migration of the new currency in 2026 from the perspective of open interest (OI) and asset labels.

Contents

Popular coins

Latest Crypto News

Read more
iconiconiconiconiconiconicon
Customer Support:@weikecs
Business Cooperation:@weikecs
Quant Trading & MM:bd@weex.com
VIP Program:support@weex.com