A growing regulatory battle may be forming over the future of stablecoins, as Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey warns that global regulators could soon find themselves in a “wrestle” with the United States over how digital dollar-backed assets should be governed. At the center of the debate is the dominance of U.S. dollar-backed stablecoins, which currently control the majority of the global stablecoin market. Because many of the largest stablecoins are tied to the dollar, the United States holds significant influence over a rapidly expanding sector increasingly being used for payments, remittances, trading, and decentralized finance. Bailey’s comments reflect rising concerns among international regulators about financial stability and cross-border oversight. If stablecoins evolve into a major global payment rail, regulators may push for shared international standards to ensure transparency, reserve backing, consumer protections, and systemic risk management. Without aligned rules, officials fear fragmented regulation could create vulnerabilities in global finance. The debate also highlights a larger geopolitical issue: who will shape the rules of digital money. While the U.S. has moved toward establishing frameworks that could strengthen dollar dominance through stablecoins, other nations and financial institutions are pushing for global coordination to prevent any one country from holding disproportionate control over international payment systems. For crypto markets, the outcome could be significant. Clear global regulation may accelerate institutional adoption and mainstream payment use, while regulatory conflicts between major economies could slow progress or fragment liquidity across jurisdictions. As stablecoins become increasingly embedded in finance, the battle over oversight is quickly becoming one of crypto’s most important policy fights.
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