The post Why Banks Are Reclaiming the Narrative appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In today’s newsletter, Sam Boboev, founder of Fintech Wrap Up, looks at howThe post Why Banks Are Reclaiming the Narrative appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In today’s newsletter, Sam Boboev, founder of Fintech Wrap Up, looks at how

Why Banks Are Reclaiming the Narrative

8 min read

In today’s newsletter, Sam Boboev, founder of Fintech Wrap Up, looks at how banks are embracing stablecoins and tokenization to upgrade banking rails.

Then, Xin Yan, co-founder and CEO at Sign, answers questions about banks and stablecoins in Ask an Expert.

-Sarah Morton


From stablecoins to tokenized deposits: why banks are reclaiming the narrative

Stablecoins dominated early digital money discourse because they solved a narrow technical failure: moving value natively on digital rails when banks could not. Speed, programmability and cross-platform settlement exposed the limits of correspondent banking and batch-based systems. That phase is ending. Banks are now advancing tokenized deposits to reassert control over money creation, liability structure and regulatory alignment.

This is not a reversal of innovation. It is a containment strategy.

Stablecoins expanded capability outside the banking perimeter

Stablecoins function as privately issued settlement assets. They are typically liabilities of non-bank entities, backed by reserve portfolios whose composition, custody and liquidity treatment vary by issuer. Even when fully reserved, they sit outside deposit insurance frameworks and outside direct prudential supervision applied to banks.

The technical gain was real. The structural consequence was material. Value transfer began to migrate beyond regulated balance sheets. Liquidity that once reinforced the banking system started pooling in parallel structures governed by disclosure regimes rather than capital rules.

That shift is incompatible with how banks, regulators and central banks define monetary stability.

Tokenized deposits preserve the deposit, change the rail

Tokenized deposits do not introduce new money. They repackage existing deposits using distributed ledger infrastructure. The asset remains a bank liability. The claim structure remains unchanged. Only the settlement and programmability layer evolves.

This distinction is decisive.

A tokenized deposit sits on a regulated bank balance sheet. It remains subject to capital requirements, liquidity coverage rules, resolution regimes and — where applicable — deposit insurance. There is no ambiguity about seniority in insolvency. There is no reserve opacity problem. There is no new issuer risk to underwrite.

Banks are not competing with stablecoins on speed alone. They are competing on legal certainty.

Balance-sheet control is the core issue

The real fault line is balance-sheet location.

Stablecoins externalize settlement liquidity. Even when reserves are held at regulated institutions, the liability itself does not belong to the bank. Monetary transmission weakens. Supervisory visibility fragments. Stress propagates through structures that are not designed for systemic loads.

Tokenized deposits keep settlement liquidity inside the regulated perimeter. Faster movement does not equal balance-sheet escape. Capital stays measurable. Liquidity remains supervisable. Risk remains allocable.

This is why banks support tokenization while resisting stablecoin substitution. The technology is acceptable. The disintermediation is not.

Consumer protection is not a feature, it is a constraint

Stablecoins require users to assess issuer credibility, reserve quality, legal enforceability and operational resilience. These are institutional-level risk judgments pushed onto end users.

Tokenized deposits remove that burden. Consumer protection is inherited, not reconstructed. Dispute resolution, insolvency treatment and legal recourse follow existing banking law. The user does not become a credit analyst by necessity.

For advisors, this difference defines suitability. Digital form does not override liability quality.

Narrative reclamation is strategic, not cosmetic

Banks are repositioning digital money as an evolution of deposits, not a replacement. This reframing recenters authority over money within licensed institutions while absorbing the functional gains demonstrated by stablecoins.

The outcome is convergence: blockchain rails carrying bank money, not private substitutes.

Stablecoins forced the system to confront its architectural limits. Tokenized deposits are how incumbents address them without surrendering control.

Digital money will persist. The unresolved variable is issuer primacy. Banks are moving to close that gap now.

Sam Boboev, founder, Fintech Wrap Up


Ask an Expert

Q. Banks are increasingly framing stablecoins not as speculative crypto assets, but as infrastructure for settlement, collateral and programmable money. From your perspective, working on blockchain infrastructure, what’s driving this shift inside large financial institutions, and how different is this moment from earlier stablecoin cycles?

A. The meaningful distinction between a stablecoin and traditional fiat is that the stablecoin exists on-chain.

That on-chain nature is precisely what makes stablecoins interesting to financial institutions. Once money is natively digital and programmable, it can be used directly for settlement, payments, collateralization and atomic execution across systems, without relying on fragmented legacy rails.

Historically, we’ve seen concerns around stablecoins focused on technical and operational risk, such as smart contract failure or insufficient resilience. Those concerns have largely faded. Core stablecoin infrastructure has been battle-tested across multiple cycles and sustained real-world usage.

Technically, the risk profile is now well understood and often lower than commonly assumed. The remaining uncertainty is predominantly legal and regulatory rather than technological. Many jurisdictions still lack a clear framework that fully recognizes stablecoins or CBDCs as first-class representations of sovereign currency. This ambiguity limits their adoption at scale within regulated financial systems, even when the underlying technology is mature.

That said, this moment feels structurally different from earlier cycles. The conversation has shifted from “should this exist?” to “how do we integrate it safely into the monetary system?”

I expect 2026 to bring significant regulatory clarification and formal adoption pathways across multiple countries, driven by the recognition that on-chain money is not a competing asset class, but an upgrade to financial infrastructure.

Q. As banks move toward tokenized deposits and on-chain settlement, identity, compliance and verifiable credentials become central. From your work with institutions, what infrastructure gaps still need to be solved before banks can scale these systems safely?

A. For these systems to run naturally, we have to match the speed of compliance and identity with the speed of the assets themselves. Right now, settlement happens in seconds, but verification still relies on manual work. The first step to solving this isn’t decentralization. It is simply getting these records digitized so they can be accessed on-chain. We are already seeing many countries actively working to move their core identity and compliance data onto the blockchain.

In my view, there is no single “gap” that, once closed, will suddenly allow everything to scale perfectly. Instead, it is a process of fixing one bottleneck at a time. It is like a “left hand pushing the right hand” forward. Based on our discussions with various governments and institutions, the immediate priority is turning identity and entity proofs into electronic formats that can be stored and retrieved across different systems.

Currently, we rely too much on manual verification, which is slow and prone to errors. We need to move toward a model where identity is a verifiable digital credential. Once you can pull this data instantly without a human having to manually check and verify a document, the system can actually keep up with the speed of a stablecoin. We are building the bridge between the old way of filing paperwork and the new way of instant digital proof. It is a gradual improvement where we fix each short plank in the barrel until the whole system can hold water.

Q. Many policymakers now talk about stablecoins and tokenized deposits as payment infrastructure rather than investment products. How does that reframe the long-term role of stablecoins as banks increasingly place them alongside traditional payment rails?

A. The future of the world is going to be completely digitized. It does not matter if you are talking about dollar-backed stablecoins, tokenized deposits or central bank digital currencies. In the end, they are all part of the same thing. This is a massive upgrade to the entire global financial system. Reframing stablecoins as infrastructure is a very positive move because it focuses on removing the friction that slows down the movement of assets today.

When we work on digital identity systems or nation-level blockchain networks, we see it as a necessary technical evolution. In fact, if we do our jobs well, the general public should not even know that the underlying system has changed. They will not care about the “blockchain” or the “token.” They will simply notice that their businesses run faster and their money moves instantly.

The real goal of this reframe is to speed up the turnover of capital across the entire economy. When money can move at the speed of the internet, the whole engine of global trade starts to run more efficiently. We are not just creating a new investment product. We are building a smoother road for everything else to travel on. This long-term role is about making the global economy more fluid and removing the old barriers that keep value trapped in slow, manual processes.

Xin Yan, co-founder and CEO, Sign


Keep Reading

Source: https://www.coindesk.com/coindesk-indices/2026/01/28/crypto-for-advisors-banks-and-digital-money

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Shibarium May No Longer Turbocharge Shiba Inu Price Rally, Here’s Reason

Shibarium May No Longer Turbocharge Shiba Inu Price Rally, Here’s Reason

The post Shibarium May No Longer Turbocharge Shiba Inu Price Rally, Here’s Reason appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Shibarium, the layer-2 blockchain of the Shiba Inu (SHIB) ecosystem, is battling to stay active. Shibarium has slipped from hitting transaction milestones to struggling to record any transactions on its platform, a development that could severely impact SHIB. Shibarium transactions crash from millions to near zero As per Shibariumscan data, the total daily transactions on Shibarium as of Sept. 16 stood at 11,600. This volume of transactions reflects how low the transaction count has dropped for the L2, whose daily average ranged between 3.5 million and 4 million last month. However, in the last week of August, daily transaction volume on Shibarium lost momentum, slipping from 1.3 million to 9,590 as of Aug. 28. This pattern has lingered for much of September, with the highest peak so far being on Sept. 5, when it posted 1.26 million transactions. The low user engagement has greatly affected the transaction count in recent days. In addition, the security breach over the weekend by malicious attackers on Shibarium has probably worsened issues. Although developer Kaal Dhairya reassured the community that the attack to steal millions of BONE tokens was successfully prevented, users’ confidence appears shaken. This has also impacted the price outlook for Shiba Inu, the ecosystem’s native token. Following reports of the malicious attack on Shibarium, SHIB dipped immediately into the red zone. Unlike on previous occasions where investors accumulated on the dip, market participants did not flock to Shiba Inu. Shiba Inu price struggles, can burn mechanism help? With the current near-zero crash in transaction volume for Shibarium, SHIB’s price cannot depend on it to support a rally. It might take a while to rebuild user confidence and for transactions to pick up again. In the meantime, Shiba Inu might have to rely on other means to boost prices from its low levels. This…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 07:57
👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – When banks go cashless

👨🏿‍🚀TechCabal Daily – When banks go cashless

In today's edition: South Africa's biggest banks are going cashless || Onafriq and PAPSS pilot Naira wallet transfers from Nigeria to Ghana || South Africa just
Share
Techcabal2026/02/04 14:02
Wormhole launches reserve tying protocol revenue to token

Wormhole launches reserve tying protocol revenue to token

The post Wormhole launches reserve tying protocol revenue to token appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Wormhole is changing how its W token works by creating a new reserve designed to hold value for the long term. Announced on Wednesday, the Wormhole Reserve will collect onchain and offchain revenues and other value generated across the protocol and its applications (including Portal) and accumulate them into W, locking the tokens within the reserve. The reserve is part of a broader update called W 2.0. Other changes include a 4% targeted base yield for tokenholders who stake and take part in governance. While staking rewards will vary, Wormhole said active users of ecosystem apps can earn boosted yields through features like Portal Earn. The team stressed that no new tokens are being minted; rewards come from existing supply and protocol revenues, keeping the cap fixed at 10 billion. Wormhole is also overhauling its token release schedule. Instead of releasing large amounts of W at once under the old “cliff” model, the network will shift to steady, bi-weekly unlocks starting October 3, 2025. The aim is to avoid sharp periods of selling pressure and create a more predictable environment for investors. Lockups for some groups, including validators and investors, will extend an additional six months, until October 2028. Core contributor tokens remain under longer contractual time locks. Wormhole launched in 2020 as a cross-chain bridge and now connects more than 40 blockchains. The W token powers governance and staking, with a capped supply of 10 billion. By redirecting fees and revenues into the new reserve, Wormhole is betting that its token can maintain value as demand for moving assets and data between chains grows. This is a developing story. This article was generated with the assistance of AI and reviewed by editor Jeffrey Albus before publication. Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters: Source: https://blockworks.co/news/wormhole-launches-reserve
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 01:55