A new European Central Bank [ECB] working paper warns that large-scale stablecoin adoption could reduce bank deposits, constrain lending, and complicate monetary policy transmission in the euro area.
The study argues that as households and firms shift funds from traditional bank deposits into stablecoins, banks may face funding pressures that alter how interest rate changes ripple through the financial system.
The authors caution that effects could become materially stronger if stablecoin usage expands significantly.
Stablecoins as deposit substitutes
The paper identifies a “deposit substitution effect,” in which stablecoins compete directly with retail bank deposits. As deposits decline, banks may rely more heavily on wholesale funding sources. These are typically more volatile and sensitive to market conditions.
Using macroeconomic and bank-level data, the authors find that a higher share of non-bank digital money is associated with a smaller retail deposit base and reduced lending to firms.
Small-scale adoption has modest impact, but widespread use could meaningfully weaken banks’ lending capacity.
In practical terms, stablecoins could reshape the traditional bank funding model if adoption moves beyond niche crypto usage and into broader financial activity.
Monetary policy transmission could shift
The ECB paper also suggests stablecoins may change how monetary policy works.
In the euro area, rate decisions primarily affect the economy through banks. If banks rely more on wholesale funding due to deposit outflows, policy rate increases may pass through to lending rates more rapidly, potentially amplifying tightening cycles.
At the same time, stablecoins could weaken the deposit channel, as competition from digital dollar-pegged tokens may limit banks’ ability to adjust deposit rates without risking further outflows.
The combined effect, according to the authors, could make monetary policy transmission less predictable, particularly during periods of stress.
Dollar dominance and monetary sovereignty
The study highlights that roughly 99% of global stablecoin market capitalization is denominated in U.S. dollars. If dollar-backed stablecoins gain traction within the euro area, U.S. monetary policy shocks could indirectly affect euro liquidity conditions.
In such a scenario, foreign policy decisions and global risk sentiment may influence domestic financial conditions, raising concerns about monetary sovereignty.
While the paper does not argue that stablecoins currently threaten financial stability, it emphasizes that scale matters. Projections cited in the study suggest stablecoin market capitalization could expand significantly over the coming decade.
A question of scale and structure
The paper’s conclusions depend heavily on adoption levels and usage patterns. Many stablecoins today are primarily used for crypto trading and hold reserves in bank deposits or short-term government securities, which may limit immediate real-economy effects.
In that sense, the ECB’s potential impact is conditional rather than imminent. However, the authors make clear that if stablecoins evolve into widely used payment or savings instruments, their interaction with bank balance sheets could become more consequential.
As policymakers continue debating digital euro proposals and stablecoin regulation, the paper frames stablecoins not merely as a crypto-market innovation but as a structural variable within the broader banking system.
Final Summary
- The ECB study suggests large-scale stablecoin adoption could reduce bank deposits and alter monetary policy transmission if usage expands significantly.
- While current effects appear limited, the paper argues that scale and dollar dominance will determine whether stablecoins reshape euro area banking dynamics.