Payment Stablecoins and Cross Border Payments: Benefits and Implications for Monetary Policy Implementation (FRB)
Federal Reserve Board (FRB) staff outline how regulated “payment stablecoins” for cross‑border use could lower reliance on correspondent banking while altering demand for reserves, deposits, and Treasury bills. They argue that low‑cost, widely accessible stablecoins could shorten payment chains, compress fees and delays, and introduce competitive pressure on concentrated correspondent banking networks, but would still leave some reliance on large banks for foreign exchange risk‑management and on/off‑ramp services. For policy and institutional design, they stress that stablecoin reserve‑asset composition—bank deposits, Treasury bills, or central bank reserves—would shift liquidity, safe‑asset demand, and central bank balance‑sheet management in materially different ways. [FRB]