- Of the $322 billion in stablecoins currently in circulation, roughly 99% are pegged to the U.S. dollar — and the Trump administration’s Genius Act has formalized stablecoins as a strategic tool to extend dollar influence globally.
- The ECB’s digital euro is not expected to launch until 2029 at the earliest, with a key European Parliament committee vote already postponed to at least June — prompting ECB President Lagarde to warn publicly: “We don’t want to be left in the dust.”
- Nearly two-thirds of euro-area card-based transactions are already processed by non-European companies (Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, Google Pay), and a stablecoin world dominated by dollar tokens would add another layer of dependency.
- European banks including ING, UniCredit, BBVA, BNP Paribas, and Societe Generale are pushing ahead with their own euro-denominated stablecoins — arguing they can deliver monetary sovereignty faster than the ECB’s slow-moving official project.
What Happened?
Europe is losing the race to shape the digital future of money. While the U.S. has moved aggressively — passing the Genius Act to provide a regulatory framework for dollar-pegged stablecoins, with Tether alone holding $117 billion in U.S. Treasuries as reserves — the EU is mired in bureaucratic delays, regulatory disagreements, and bank lobbying that has pushed the digital euro launch to 2029. ECB President Christine Lagarde is openly frustrated, telling a central bank conference last year that the pace was “too long.” Meanwhile, a consortium of European banks called Qivalis (backed by ING, UniCredit, BBVA, and BNP Paribas) is planning to launch a euro stablecoin this year, arguing the private sector can move faster than the ECB while still serving the same sovereignty goal.
Why It Matters?
The geopolitical stakes are high: stablecoins are becoming the payment rails of the global digital economy, and whoever controls those rails wields significant monetary influence. Europe already depends on U.S. firms for roughly two-thirds of its card payment processing; a dollar-dominant stablecoin layer would deepen that dependency further. The Russia precedent is instructive — when SWIFT and card networks were weaponized against Moscow after the 2022 Ukraine invasion, it demonstrated how quickly financial infrastructure can become a geopolitical tool. EU officials openly cite the same vulnerability as a reason to accelerate the digital euro. China, Russia, and Iran are all developing digital currency alternatives or using existing crypto assets to bypass dollar-dominated payment rails — raising the urgency for Europe to establish its own.
What’s Next?
The postponed European Parliament committee vote on the digital euro — now expected no earlier than June — is the near-term legislative milestone to watch. If it passes, it clears the path for ECB implementation ahead of the 2029 target. The more immediate action may come from private euro stablecoins: Qivalis expects to launch this year, and several other bank-backed euro tokens are already live in limited form. The competitive dynamic between the official digital euro and private euro stablecoins will define Europe’s monetary sovereignty strategy for the next decade.
Source: Bloomberg












