The post $6.6 Trillion at Risk: Wall Street Fears Stablecoins Could Break the Banking System appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Just weeks ago, the crypto market was enjoying record highs, is now under heavy pressure. Bitcoin has dropped close to $114,000 after touching its all-time peak, and coins like Ethereum, Solana, and XRP are also deep in the red.

Amid the crypto crash, Wall Street is raising fresh alarms over a possible $6.6 trillion liquidity risk linked to stablecoins. A threat that not only impacts the crypto market but also the whole financial system.

Wall Street Raises the Red Flag

The global crypto selloff has wiped out hundreds of billions, dragging the market’s value down to about $3.88 trillion, its lowest in weeks. The drop comes at a time when Wall Street grows worried about a newly passed Genius Act, which targets stablecoins, digital tokens linked to the U.S. dollar. 

Banking giants such as JPMorgan and Bank of America are warning Congress to close loopholes in the law. 

They warn that if stablecoin issuers are allowed to offer yields through affiliates, it could cause up to $6.6 trillion withdrawal of deposits from U.S. banks. This means investors might pull trillions from regular bank deposits and put them into stablecoins that pay interest.

Why Banks Are Worried

For the banking sector, deposits are its lifeline, which they use to give loans to families and businesses. If money moves into stablecoins at a massive scale, banks warn that lending could shrink, borrowing costs could rise, and the overall economy could face risks.

This concern is not just theoretical. 

A U.S. Treasury report earlier this year warned that the stablecoin market, now about $280 billion, could grow past $2 trillion by 2028, which could reshape the financial system.

Growing Stablecoin Demand In the Globe

This debate comes at a time when the stablecoin industry itself is heating up. While Tether’s USDT continues to dominate, it now faces mounting competition not only from crypto-native companies but also from Wall Street heavyweights, fintech firms, and even technology giants. 

Recently, the Japan Financial Services Agency (FSA) announced that it may soon approve its first yen-based stablecoin.

Politics and Big Tech Join the Fight

This battle isn’t just about finance; it’s political, too. Donald Trump, who is now openly supporting crypto, has promoted projects that challenge Wall Street’s power.

At the same time, tech giants and payment firms such as PayPal, Stripe, and Meta are pushing into the stablecoin market, creating more competition and pressure on banks.

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