The us federal reserve's findings reinforce the continued dominance of the dollar in global debt markets, despite cyclical patterns. dollar-pegged stablecoins like usdt and usdc are highlighted as significant holders of us treasuries, which solidifies their backing and integration with traditional finance. this strengthens the perceived stability of these crucial crypto ecosystem components.
The information is derived from a us federal reserve discussion paper, supported by data from the bank for international settlements (bis), defillama, and direct reports from tether and circle, all highly reputable sources.
As stablecoins, usdt and usdc are designed to maintain a peg to the us dollar, so their direct price movement is expected to remain neutral ($1.00). however, the reinforcement of their robust backing and the dollar's continued global primacy reduces perceived risk, indirectly contributing to overall market confidence.
The fed study analyzes dollar dominance over six decades, indicating long-term structural patterns. the increasing role of stablecoins as holders of us debt and the long-term competitive responses from other nations (e.g., euro-pegged stablecoins by 2026) signify long-term implications for global finance and crypto's integration.
Nate Kostar 1 minute ago Global debt markets show dollar dominance moves in cycles, US Fed says A recent study by the US Federal Reserve argues that despite periodic challenges, a lack of credible alternatives has kept the dollar at the center of global bond markets. Listen 0:00 News COINTELEGRAPH IN YOUR SOCIAL FEED A new Federal Reserve discussion paper finds that the US dollar’s role in global bond markets has risen and fallen in cycles over the past six decades, with no clear long-term trend toward either greater dollar dominance or de-dollarization. Using the Bank for International Settlements’ (BIS) international debt securities database, the authors identify three distinct “dollarization waves” since the 1960s, showing that shifts in currency use have followed cyclical patterns rather than a steady structural change in global financing. “We find no monotonic dollarization or de-dollarization trend; instead, the dollar’s share exhibits a wavelike pattern,” the paper says. The most recent wave emerged after the 2008 global financial crisis, when the dollar regained market share in international bond issuance, climbing back toward levels seen before the surge in euro-denominated bond issuance in the early 2000s, according to the report. Share of international debt issued by currency, 2000–2024. Source: Federal Reserve The study also found that, as of 2024, emerging market issuers still rely predominantly on dollar-denominated debt, which accounts for about 80% of their outstanding international bonds, while efforts by China begun in 2010 to internationalize its currency, the renminbi, have produced only modest gains. “While the dollar’s eminence rests on vulnerable foundations, the absence of viable alternatives has left the dollar’s primacy unchallenged,” the report said. Related: Intuit to use Circle’s stablecoin for financial platforms Stablecoins back US Treasurys The global stablecoin market has expanded sharply over the past year, growing to roughly $309.6 billion from $205.5 billion in December 2024, according to DefiLlama data . Most of that growth has been concentrated in US dollar-pegged tokens, with Tether’s USDt ( USDT ) and Circle’s USDC ( USDC ) together accounting for about 85% of total stablecoin supply, or roughly $264 billion of the market at the time of writing. Stablecoin market cap. Source: DefiLlama As dollar-pegged stablecoins have expanded, issuers have become significant holders of short-term US government debt. In its second-quarter 2025 reserve report, Tether said its exposure to US Treasurys exceeded $127 billion, including $105.5 billion held directly and $21.3 billion held indirectly. According to the company, that level of Treasury holdings places Tether among the largest holders of US government debt. Circle’s latest transparency report, dated Dec. 15, shows USDC is also backed largely by US government debt instruments, including $49.7 billion in overnight reverse Treasury repos and $18.5 billion in short-term Treasurys. Circle’s reserves composition. Dec. 15, 2025. Source: Circle A July report from digital asset bank Sygnum said the US government sees dollar-pegged stablecoins as a means to reinforce the dollar’s role as a global reserve currency and is backing their growth through legislation. Other countries have taken notice. In April, Italy’s Economy and Finance Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti warned that US policies supporting dollar-backed stablecoins pose a greater long-term risk to Europe’s financial system than trade tariffs, citing their potential to erode the euro’s role in cross-border payments. In December, a group of 10 European banks said they plan to launch a euro-pegged stablecoin in the second half of 2026. Magazine: Meet the onchain crypto detectives fighting crime better than the cops # Circle # United States # National Debt # Tether # Stablecoin # Regulation Add reaction