- Fed Governor Christopher Waller said at an event in Dubrovnik that stablecoin adoption is effectively importing US monetary policy: “You are going to import US monetary costs, so it’s broadening the reach of US monetary policy in countries that use more stablecoins”
- Waller expressed support for stablecoins as a vehicle for extending dollar reserve status globally, while emphasizing the need for clear regulatory rules
- He attacked central bank digital currencies as a “solution in search of a problem,” claiming almost every major central bank has stopped pursuing them — prompting a correction from ECB incoming VP Boris Vujcic that 21 western central banks are proceeding with CBDCs
- The ECB plans to launch a digital euro in 2029 following a pilot phase beginning as early as next year; ECB President Lagarde has also warned that even euro-denominated stablecoins pose risks to financial stability and monetary policy
What Happened?
Fed Governor Christopher Waller spoke at a central banking conference in Dubrovnik, Croatia on Sunday and made the clearest case yet from a sitting Fed official for stablecoins as instruments of US monetary statecraft. Countries that adopt dollar-pegged stablecoins, Waller argued, effectively fix their exchange rates to the dollar and import US monetary conditions — a massive amplification of Fed policy reach at zero cost to the US. He reiterated his 2025 position supporting stablecoins with regulation. In the same remarks, he dismissed central bank digital currencies as unnecessary, claiming the push for CBDCs had stalled globally — drawing an immediate correction from ECB incoming Vice President Boris Vujcic, who noted that 21 western central banks have committed to CBDCs.
Why It Matters?
Waller’s framing reframes the stablecoin debate from a domestic regulatory question to a geopolitical one. If stablecoin adoption extends the dollar’s reserve currency dominance in emerging markets and dollarizes informal economies, the US gains a powerful new vector of monetary influence — without the operational complexity and privacy concerns of a CBDC. This is exactly the argument that has made stablecoin legislation a bipartisan priority in Congress, with the GENIUS Act moving through the Senate. The ECB pushback is equally telling: European officials see dollar stablecoins as a direct threat to monetary sovereignty, which is why Lagarde has been publicly critical of them. The Waller-Vujcic exchange in Dubrovnik crystallizes a transatlantic divide over the future monetary architecture that will play out over years.
What’s Next?
The GENIUS Act — the Senate stablecoin regulatory framework — is the most proximate legislative catalyst. A clear US regulatory regime would accelerate institutional stablecoin issuance and international adoption, reinforcing Waller’s thesis about dollar reach. On the CBDC front, the ECB’s 2026 pilot and 2029 launch timeline means Europe is moving regardless of US skepticism; the question is whether dollar stablecoins crowd out demand for the digital euro in third markets before it launches. Watch for Waller’s follow-up formal remarks, as Dubrovnik conferences often serve as trial balloons for policy messaging — and his framing of stablecoins as monetary-policy amplifiers could become the official Fed line as legislation advances.
Source: Bloomberg











