The US's proactive stablecoin legislation is creating a global ripple effect. Foreign governments now fear the ease of transacting with tokenized US dollars will undermine their own currencies. This is pressuring nations like Canada and the UK to accelerate plans for their own digital currencies simply to remain geopolitically and economically relevant.
Major payment provider Checkout.com is rolling out stablecoin payments in the US based on a belief in the technology's future, not current consumer demand. They are explicitly treating it as an experiment to see how users react, signaling a shift from demand-driven to vision-driven product development in fintech.
Coinbase's policy chief reveals the Trump administration is fast-tracking crypto-friendly regulations. The strategy is to establish them so firmly in market practice that courts would be hesitant to allow a future, less favorable administration to reverse them, effectively creating regulatory 'stickiness' that outlasts a single political term.
Contrary to the typical 'legislate, then regulate, then launch' sequence, US regulators like the CFTC are actively permitting advanced stablecoin applications, such as derivatives settlement, even as overarching laws are still being finalized. This parallel-track approach accelerates market adoption and creates real-world precedent before rules are set in stone.
According to Coinbase, the fiercest opposition from traditional finance isn't against crypto assets themselves, but against the move to instantaneous (T+0) settlement. This shift threatens to eliminate the lucrative 'economic rents' that financial intermediaries earn from the existing lag in transactions, making it a core battleground for the industry's future.
Executives from both fintech and crypto-native firms agree that the engineering work is the most straightforward part of launching a crypto product. The primary obstacles lie in managing regulators, navigating state-by-state legal frameworks, and getting stakeholder buy-in, making legal and policy teams more critical than dev teams for go-to-market.
