Stablecoins are becoming a central bank problem hiding in T-bill markets


Stablecoin flows have crossed from crypto liquidity into the market map central banks use to track dollar funding.

The Bank for International Settlements, in its June 23 Annual Economic Report chapter on innovation beyond stablecoins, argued that private dollar tokens still fall short of the core tests of money. The same official-sector push now sits alongside a working paper estimate that a $3.5 billion, five-day stablecoin inflow can move three-month Treasury bill yields by about four basis points within 10 days.

The consequence is practical. Stablecoins are becoming a measurable channel between on-chain dollar demand and the front end of sovereign debt markets.

For crypto, stablecoin growth now carries a funding-market signal. For central banks, reserve management, redemption behavior, and tokenized settlement design sit inside the same policy conversation.

Stablecoins are quickly becoming the Kevin Warsh's Fed's next policy problemStablecoins are quickly becoming the Kevin Warsh's Fed's next policy problem
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The money tests behind the market risk

The BIS chapter starts from a basic monetary test. Money works because users can treat one unit as equal to another, because the system can supply liquidity when payments need to settle, and because the network can control financial crime and preserve trust.

Stablecoins can move fast and can be programmed into public blockchains. BIS acknowledges that utility. Its argument is that current arrangements lack the institutional support needed for bank deposits and central bank money to function as no-questions-asked settlement assets.

In the BIS framework, the weak points are singleness, liquidity elasticity, and integrity. Stablecoins may trade near par most of the time, but they lack the same access to central bank settlement or system-wide liquidity backstops. They can also fragment across chains and venues, making interoperability and financial integrity harder to enforce at scale.

Adoption changes the policy question. A stablecoin used primarily as a crypto quote asset is another. A stablecoin that becomes a large reserve-backed dollar instrument held across exchanges, wallets, and offshore markets is another.

The issuer then has to decide where reserves are held, how redemptions are met, and which assets are bought or sold as demand changes.

The clearest number comes from the BIS working paper on stablecoins and safe asset prices. The paper estimates that a $3.5 billion aggregate stablecoin inflow, about two standard deviations in its sample, lowers three-month Treasury bill yields by roughly 0.71 basis points on impact and up to four basis points within 10 days.

The paper frames the effect as sample-specific rather than a rule for every stablecoin flow. It uses daily data from January 2021 to March 2026, local projections, and an instrument designed to isolate shocks to stablecoin flows.

It also says the estimate is strongest in the maturity bucket where issuers are most likely to hold reserves, and that effects are amplified when Treasury-market intermediaries are under stress or as the stablecoin sector grows.

That is the policy signal in the evidence. A four-basis-point move in a single short-rate instrument is small in isolation. It is still a sign that stablecoin issuers have become large enough for their reserve allocation to show up in the market used to price safe dollar liquidity.

The companion BIS paper on making stablecoins stable(r) adds the other side of the same mechanism. Large redemptions can force issuers to lean on cash buffers or sell short-dated bonds.

The paper models how liquidity and capital thresholds can reduce default and spillover risks when they work as usable buffers, while rigid rules can also push issuers into bond sales too early during stress.

Stablecoin channel Market link Policy signal
New inflows More demand for short-term Treasuries or repo BIS estimates inflow shocks can compress front-end yields where issuer reserves are invested
Redemptions Cash use or bond sales BIS models show buffers can reduce spillovers, but threshold design can shape stress transmission
Foreign demand Digital dollar access and FX conversion BIS research links net stablecoin-flow shocks to parity gaps, local currencies and dollar funding premiums
Official tokenization Tokenized deposits and central bank reserves BIS projects are testing supervised settlement rails inside the two-tier monetary system

Infographic showing stablecoin demand flowing through issuer reserves into T-bill markets and central bank tokenized settlement responses.Infographic showing stablecoin demand flowing through issuer reserves into T-bill markets and central bank tokenized settlement responses.

Separate BIS research on stablecoin flows and FX markets extends the point beyond T-bills. It finds that shocks to net stablecoin inflows can widen deviations from stablecoin-dollar parity, affect local currency values, and change short-term dollar funding premiums.

The finding stops short of turning every stablecoin transfer into a macro event. It shows why central banks are studying these flows as part of dollar and FX plumbing.

Scale makes the spillover question harder to ignore

CryptoSlate market data on June 26 showed Tether with a market capitalization of about $186.08 billion and a 24-hour trading volume of about $84.95 billion. USDC stood at a market cap of nearly $73.68 billion and a daily trading volume of $15.54 billion.

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Together, the two largest dollar-stablecoins represented roughly $259.76 billion in market value and more than $100 billion in daily trading volume. Stablecoins remain far smaller than the Treasury market, but their reserve portfolios are concentrated in cash, repo, money funds, and short-duration government debt.

The US and European policy backdrop helps explain why the reserve question is arriving now. The White House framed the GENIUS Act around 100% liquid backing, monthly reserve disclosures, and the idea that regulated stablecoins could support demand for Treasuries and the dollar.

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That is a policy claim, rather than a market certainty, but it explains why reserve composition has become central.

Europe is asking a similar question from the other side. The European Commission opened a 2026 review of MiCA’s crypto-asset framework, including asset-referenced and e-money tokens.

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