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Does your bank belong in stablecoins, tokenised deposits — or both?

Does your bank belong in stablecoins, tokenised deposits — or both?

Banks around the world are quietly approaching a strategic crossroads: whether to embrace stablecoins, develop tokenised deposits, or operate both in parallel. What once looked like a niche crypto experiment has now become a mainstream infrastructure debate, as financial institutions reassess how money itself should move in an increasingly digital economy.

Two rails, one destination

At first glance, stablecoins and tokenised deposits appear to solve the same problem: enabling fast, programmable, always-on payments. But structurally they are very different.

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Stablecoins are typically issued by private companies and backed by reserves, functioning as digital cash outside the traditional banking system. Tokenised deposits, by contrast, are conventional bank deposits represented on blockchain rails — keeping funds inside regulated balance sheets while gaining real-time settlement and smart-contract functionality.

Global regulators, including the Bank for International Settlements, increasingly frame tokenised deposits as a safer evolutionary step, preserving prudential oversight while modernising payments infrastructure.

Yet stablecoins continue to gain traction in cross-border commerce, decentralised finance, and emerging markets, where speed and accessibility often matter more than institutional alignment.

Why big banks are experimenting

Major financial groups are already testing both approaches. JPMorgan Chase has piloted tokenised deposits for wholesale settlement, while stablecoin issuers such as Circle have expanded global distribution of dollar-linked digital currency.

The motivation is straightforward: traditional correspondent banking is slow, expensive, and operationally complex. Blockchain-based money can settle transactions in seconds, reduce reconciliation costs, and unlock new use cases in trade finance, treasury management, and machine-to-machine payments.

For banks, tokenised deposits offer a way to modernise without surrendering control. For fintech platforms and global merchants, stablecoins provide neutrality and portability across borders.

The regulatory fault line

The real divide is regulatory.

Tokenised deposits fall squarely under existing banking frameworks: capital requirements, deposit insurance, and supervisory oversight. Stablecoins live in a more fragmented landscape, with rules varying widely by jurisdiction and issuer.

This distinction matters. Corporates and institutional investors tend to favour tokenised deposits for large-value flows, where counterparty risk and compliance are paramount. Retail users and emerging-market entrepreneurs often gravitate toward stablecoins for their simplicity and global reach.

Rather than a winner-takes-all outcome, the market is drifting toward coexistence.

A dual-track future

Most analysts now expect a hybrid financial stack:

– Tokenised deposits powering regulated wholesale and corporate activity
– Stablecoins enabling open-network payments, remittances, and digital commerce
– Interoperability layers connecting both worlds

In this model, banks remain central — but no longer exclusive — to how value moves.

The strategic question for financial institutions is not whether blockchain money will matter. It is whether they participate early enough to shape standards, liquidity, and customer relationships.

Implications for investors and operators

For investors, this shift signals a broader re-plumbing of global finance. Payment rails, custody infrastructure, compliance technology, and digital identity systems are becoming critical layers of tomorrow’s banking stack.

For banks, the message is sharper: standing still risks disintermediation. Those that integrate programmable money into their core architecture may gain new revenue streams and operational efficiencies. Those that don’t may find themselves relegated to legacy back ends.

Money is becoming software. And software rarely waits for incumbents to catch up.

Newshub Editorial in Europe – 19 February 2026

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