Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey has warned of a significant regulatory clash with the United States over the future of stablecoins, digital assets now valued at over $317 billion globally. Bailey argues that without shared international standards, these dollar-pegged tokens could threaten financial stability.
"If we want stablecoins to be part of the architecture of payments globally... they're only going to work if we have international standards,” Bailey said at a Bank of England conference on May 8. “Frankly, that, I think, is going to be a coming wrestle with the [US] administration."
The core of the disagreement stems from differing regulatory approaches. The current US administration has promoted stablecoin expansion to enhance the dollar's dominance in payments. In contrast, Bailey, who also chairs the international Financial Stability Board, has voiced concerns about tokens that cannot be readily converted to cash outside of a crypto exchange, a structural weakness he fears could be exposed in a crisis. The global stablecoin market is primarily backed by US Treasury bills and dollars, according to data from CoinGecko.
Bailey cautioned that a market shock could trigger a "run on a stablecoin," causing capital to flee from less-regulated US-issued tokens to jurisdictions with more robust safeguards. “We know what would happen if there was a run on a stablecoin; they’d all turn up here,” he said, highlighting the potential for sudden, destabilizing flows into the United Kingdom as it develops its own comprehensive regulatory framework with strong convertibility requirements.
A Divergence on Risk
The governor's comments underscore a growing divergence between the UK's cautious, stability-focused approach and the US's more promotional stance on digital assets. While proponents in the US see stablecoins as a tool for innovation and strengthening the dollar's role in global payments, international regulators like Bailey see the potential for regulatory arbitrage and systemic risk.
This potential for conflict creates uncertainty for the crypto industry. Global stablecoin issuers face the prospect of navigating a fragmented regulatory landscape, with different rules for convertibility, reserves, and oversight in major financial centers. This could increase compliance costs and create operational challenges, potentially slowing the integration of stablecoins into mainstream global finance until a common framework is established. The next key date to watch is the US Senate Banking Committee's scheduled markup of a major crypto market structure bill on May 14.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.