Crypto’s $205 Billion Stablecoin Market Set to Go Mainstream

While Bitcoin’s surge above $100,000 captivated the headlines in 2024, many financial firms were more focused this year on a different type of cryptocurrency whose price is never meant to rise — or fall for that matter.

Mainstream players such as Visa, PayPal Holdings Inc., Stripe Inc. and others are making investments in projects involving stablecoins, which are crypto tokens typically designed to be pegged to the value of the US dollar or another traditional currency.

This sub-sector of the digital-asset space has proven to be a lucrative business, now that issuers are able to invest reserves backing stablecoins in short-term US Treasuries with attractive yields. And unlike Bitcoin and other tokens prone to price volatility, use of stablecoins as actual currencies in transactions is gaining popularity around the world.

“We’ve seen significant growth in demand from some of the largest companies in the world that participate in under-served payment verticals like global contractor and employee payouts, trade finance, and remittance,” said Rob Hadick, a general partner at digital-asset venture firm Dragonfly. “There is both significant demand from end users in receiving US dollars, which can be near impossible using non-stablecoin rails, but also from senders who want to bypass the correspondent banking system which can be slow, costly, and have high failure rates.”

The coming year is poised to see competition ramp up in stablecoins, which collectively have grown to about $205 billion in market capitalization, according to tracker DeFiLlama. While Tether Holdings Ltd.’s USDT extended its lead in the market this year, reaching a current market capitalization of about $140 billion, headwinds to its dominance are emerging as the calendar flips to 2025.

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