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The IMF’s Recent Warning on Stablecoins and Currency Substitution

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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has issued a stark warning about the risks of stablecoin adoption, particularly how it could accelerate currency substitution—a process where a foreign currency often the US dollar gradually replaces a local one in everyday transactions, savings, and economic activity.

This concern was outlined in the IMF’s 56-page departmental paper titled “Understanding Stablecoins.” The report highlights how stablecoins, especially those pegged to the US dollar which dominate about 97% of the $300+ billion stablecoin market, could erode monetary sovereignty in vulnerable economies.

The IMF emphasizes that stablecoins aren’t just a crypto novelty—they’re a structural shift in global money flows, driven by their ease of access via smartphones and the internet. Unlike traditional foreign currency stablecoins can “penetrate an economy rapidly via the internet and smartphones,” bypassing banks and capital controls.

This is especially risky in emerging markets like Africa, Latin America, the Middle East, and the Caribbean, where stablecoin holdings are rising faster than foreign exchange deposits used for monetary policy.

In high-inflation or unstable environments, people turn to dollar-pegged stablecoins like USDT or USDC for stability, leading to “digital dollarization.” If a large share of payments, savings, or remittances shifts to foreign stablecoins, central banks lose grip on domestic liquidity, interest rates, and credit creation.

The report notes this could amplify capital flow volatility during crises, as users flock to or flee from stablecoins en masse. Unhosted— self-custodied wallets exacerbate this by making transactions harder to track.

Stablecoin market cap has tripled since 2023 to over $260 billion for just USDT and USDC, with 2024 trading volumes hitting $23 trillion—surpassing Bitcoin and Ethereum flows for the first time.

Asia leads in activity, but substitution risks are highest in regions with weak institutions or low banking access. The IMF views this as a “survival strategy” for users in fragile economies but warns it could stifle innovation if unregulated, potentially transmitting crypto volatility to traditional banking.

To mitigate these risks without stifling growth, the IMF calls for: Harmonized rules on reserves, definitions, and oversight to avoid regulatory arbitrage. Issuers should hold high-quality, liquid assets like short-dated Treasuries and face “same activity, same risk, same regulation.”

Countries should prohibit stablecoins from being legal tender and restrict their use in official payments to protect local currencies. Late-launch central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) might struggle against established stablecoins, so proactive design is key.

This isn’t isolated— the European Central Bank echoed similar worries in November 2025 about dollar stablecoins draining deposits from local banks. Proponents, like economist Eswar Prasad, argue stablecoins expose inefficiencies in legacy systems and could enhance financial inclusion, but the “paradox” is their potential to concentrate power in the US dollar ecosystem.

The IMF sees stablecoins as “here to stay” but urges swift action to balance innovation with stability. Digital dollarization occurs when populations in emerging markets increasingly adopt USD-pegged stablecoins as a store of value, medium of exchange, or unit of account, effectively substituting local currencies amid inflation, devaluation, or capital controls.

This phenomenon, highlighted in the IMF’s recent warnings, has accelerated since 2023, with stablecoins settling over $2.6 trillion in the first half of 2024 alone, much of it in non-trading uses like remittances and savings.

Strict capital controls limit formal USD access, pushing users toward stablecoins for savings, remittances, and even property transactions. Argentina led Latin America with $91.1 billion in crypto inflows from July 2023 to June 2024, where stablecoins comprised 61.8% of transaction volume—far above the global average.

Retail-sized transfers under $10,000 grew fastest, with over 60% of crypto activity involving USD stablecoins. About 5 million users actively engage, and stablecoins trade at a 30% premium over USD, reflecting high demand.

Stablecoins act as a “digital dollar” hedge, preserving wealth and enabling cross-border payments in minutes versus days. This has accelerated dollarization, with over 50% of real estate deals now in USD equivalents, but it exacerbates peso depreciation and reduces central bank seigniorage.

Businesses benefit from lower remittance fees unlocking trapped capital. The government has eased some crypto restrictions but maintains capital controls; platforms like Bitso see surges during devaluations, highlighting informal adoption.

The Nigeria naira’s 65% drop against the USD since 2022, 34% inflation, and forex shortages have made traditional USD banking inaccessible. Stablecoins offer a workaround for remittances, salaries, and trade, appealing to a young, tech-savvy population facing unemployment and black-market premiums.

Nigeria ranks in the global top 10 for crypto use, with 54 million users and 26 million stablecoin holders. 77% of surveyed users have converted naira to stablecoins, primarily for savings (64%) and payments (57%); USDT dominates with 70% market share.

Peer-to-peer volumes on Binance P2P lead globally, and stablecoins form the largest portfolio share among emerging markets. They provide stability and yield up to 6% via platforms like Yellow Card, bypassing government interference and enabling $156 billion in annual remittances.

However, this fuels “crypto-dollarization,” pressuring the naira and complicating monetary policy, with regulators warning of volatility transmission. A 2021 central bank ban on formal crypto banking persists, but informal P2P channels thrive; recent lifts on some restrictions signal cautious integration.

The lira’s 80% value loss since 2018 and 65% inflation in 2024 stem from unconventional policies and eroding credibility. Stablecoins attract users seeking yields up to 6% and dollar exposure without banking hurdles, especially for trading and savings.

Stablecoin purchases equal 4.3% of GDP—the world’s highest—with over half the population owning crypto and 50% of transactions involving USD stablecoins. 68% of users have converted lira to stablecoins; holdings exceed $100 billion in foreign deposits, with USDT preferred for liquidity.

Stablecoins democratize access to “safe” digital dollars, hedging inflation and facilitating B2B payments, but they intensify dollarization, reducing lira demand and amplifying capital flight risks during crises.

 

 

 

 

CFTC’s Historic Approval for Spot Bitcoin Trading on U.S. Regulated Exchanges

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Signage is seen outside of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) in Washington, D.C., U.S., August 30, 2020. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly

The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) announced that listed spot cryptocurrency products, including Bitcoin, can now trade for the first time on federally regulated, CFTC-registered futures exchanges.

This marks a pivotal shift, allowing direct spot trading, buying and selling actual crypto assets on platforms like Designated Contract Markets (DCMs) under full U.S. oversight, rather than relying on offshore or lightly regulated venues.

The move aims to enhance market integrity, customer protections, and access for both retail and institutional traders while positioning the U.S. as the “crypto capital of the world.”

Applies to spot contracts for commodities like Bitcoin and Ethereum. Exchanges can offer both leveraged and non-leveraged spot trading, alongside futures, options, and perpetuals on a single platform.

Bitnomial, Inc., a Chicago-based derivatives exchange, is set to launch as the inaugural venue on December 8, 2025. It will provide portfolio margining across asset classes to reduce redundant requirements and meet CFTC standards for surveillance, clearing, and reporting.

Bitnomial is gearing up for its historic launch of leveraged retail spot crypto trading on December 8, 2025, following the CFTC’s approval for spot products on registered exchanges. This integrates spot trading seamlessly with its existing derivatives suite, emphasizing capital efficiency and transparency.

Bitnomial offers a unified platform for both retail and institutional traders, combining spot and derivatives in one venue to optimize liquidity and reduce fragmentation. Newly approved leveraged spot crypto (up to 6x leverage), enabling direct buying/selling of assets like Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) under CFTC rules.

This is the first U.S.-regulated spot crypto exchange, with non-leveraged and margined options available. First U.S.-regulated perpetuals with 8-hour funding rates; supports crypto settlement and no expiration.

Delivers actual digital assets at expiration includes industry-first futures on XRP, SOL, ETH, USDC, and more through the Crypto Complex®. European-style options on BTC, ETH, and others, with physical delivery. Custom event contracts for hedging and speculation.

All products trade on a single interface via the Botanical platform, allowing cross-product strategies like portfolio hedging. Bitcoin (BTC) and Bitcoin-related (e.g., Hashrate futures); Ethereum (ETH), Solana (SOL), XRP (first U.S. futures on XRP), Cardano (ADA), USD Coin (USDC), and expanding Crypto Complex® assets.

Full CFTC registration ensures anti-manipulation surveillance, mandatory clearing, and reporting. Open to U.S. persons and global users— subject to local laws; no preferential treatment—retail and institutional orders get equal execution under DCM rules no dark pools or asymmetric info.

Broker intermediation eliminates counterparty risk; low fees as low as 0.002% maker/taker; tax advantages like blended 60/40 long-term/short-term capital gains on eligible trades. Substantial risk disclosures emphasize leverage’s potential for losses exceeding initial deposits.

Bitnomial’s model positions it as a bridge between TradFi and crypto, fostering innovation under strict rules. Trading involves high risks—leverage can amplify losses.

CFTC Chair Caroline D. Pham emphasized using the agency’s existing authority from the 1974 Commodity Exchange Act to enable this, avoiding past “regulation by enforcement” that led to fines without safe trading options.

This follows the President’s Working Group on Digital Asset Markets recommendations and joint CFTC-SEC guidance clarifying jurisdictional lines. Recent offshore exchange failures highlighted the need for domestic safeguards against manipulation, volatility, and customer losses.

Pham noted: “Spot crypto can trade on CFTC-registered exchanges that have been the gold standard for nearly a hundred years, with the customer protections and market integrity that Americans deserve.”

Crypto communities on X are buzzing with optimism, viewing this as the end of “offshore dominance” and a boost for onshore liquidity. Posts highlight it as a “Golden Age of Innovation” under the Trump Administration, with expectations of institutional inflows and tighter spreads.

This doesn’t eliminate crypto’s inherent risks like price swings, but it introduces anti-manipulation rules and tokenized collateral like stablecoins for derivatives. Future steps include blockchain integration for clearing and settlements.

Offshore platforms remain unregulated for U.S. users, but this could draw giants like CME Group to expand spot offerings. As of December 5, 2025, Bitcoin is hovering around $92,000, up slightly amid the news, though broader market volatility persists.

This approval doesn’t cover all crypto, security tokens stay with the SEC and requires exchanges to obtain specific CFTC registration. If you’re trading, remember: This is high-risk—do your own research and consider regulated platforms only.

South Korea Signs Major Tech Pact With SoftBank’s Arm to Supercharge Chip Design and AI Ambitions

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South Korea has taken another step in its push to become a global Artificial Intelligence heavyweight, signing a sweeping agreement with SoftBank’s Arm Holdings to strengthen the country’s semiconductor and AI sectors.

The deal, announced Friday by a presidential policy adviser, underscores Seoul’s determination to raise its profile in advanced chip design and secure talent needed for a future heavily driven by AI.

Kim Yong-beom, the adviser who briefed reporters, said the memorandum of understanding includes a plan for Arm to establish a chip design school inside South Korea. The initiative is designed to train about 1,400 high-level chip design specialists, filling a gap that has long dogged Asia’s fourth-largest economy. The country has built a dominant position in memory chips through giants such as Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, yet it has struggled to grow equally strong system-semiconductor and fabless industries.

Officials say that weakness could become an obstacle as global AI competition intensifies.

Arm, a British chip and software company controlled by SoftBank, earns revenue by licensing chip architectures used in everything from smartphones to servers. Its role in the global semiconductor ecosystem expanded even further as AI companies began building models on increasingly complex computing stacks. Korean officials believe that having Arm embed a chip design curriculum locally could accelerate the country’s transition from a memory-centric industry to one capable of competing across the full semiconductor value chain.

The agreement came after SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son met South Korean President Lee Jae Myung on Friday. According to Kim, Son told the president that demand for chips will rise sharply as AI advances. Son also pointed to a serious weakness that South Korea will have to confront: energy supply. He said the country does not have enough energy capacity to support the scale of AI developments coming down the line.

Son has become one of the highest-profile evangelists of hyper-advanced AI. On Friday, he repeated his view that AI will surpass human intelligence, going far beyond the boundaries set by current systems. He said so-called Artificial Superintelligence would be “10,000 times smarter than people” and argued that it no longer made sense to believe humans could control, instruct, or manage AI. Instead, he urged societies to focus on learning how to coexist with this next phase of machine intelligence.

The meeting with Son fits into a string of high-level conversations Seoul has held with global tech giants as it tries to vault into the top tier of AI powers. President Lee has also met OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang in recent months, signaling a coordinated strategy to intertwine South Korea’s industrial base with the world’s leading AI companies.

South Korea’s biggest firms are already building out relationships tied to AI infrastructure. In October, Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix signed letters of intent to supply memory chips for OpenAI’s data centers, supporting the company’s Stargate project. Stargate is a private initiative backed by SoftBank and Oracle that aims to build massive next-generation data centers for AI workloads.

Son is expected to meet SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won later on Friday to discuss semiconductor and AI cooperation, according to the Donga Ilbo newspaper. SK Group declined to comment on the report.

The AI race in Korea has also attracted Nvidia, whose chips currently underpin most state-of-the-art AI models. In late October, Nvidia said it would supply more than 260,000 of its most advanced AI chips to the South Korean government as well as major Korean corporations, including Samsung Electronics. The move was welcomed by Seoul, which sees access to cutting-edge chips as essential for its domestic tech ecosystem.

The Arm deal lands at a moment when global tech alliances have become as important as domestic industrial policy. Seoul’s ambition to be one of the world’s top three AI powers depends not only on innovation at home but also on tapping global expertise and stitching itself into the worldwide supply and development chain. Arm’s chip design school is intended to create a local generation of engineers who can contribute to advanced architectures rather than simply manufacture components invented overseas.

The deal also diversifies the country’s partnership portfolio. For decades, South Korea’s semiconductor sector focused on scaling memory and competing with Taiwan’s TSMC in high-end fabrication. The new agreement, combined with Seoul’s outreach to companies like OpenAI, Nvidia, and Oracle, marks a shift toward a broader strategy that blends infrastructure, design capability, data-center development, and AI model research.

Officials are framing the agreement with Arm as a foundational step. Kim said the training programme would support long-term ambitions that hinge on building a balanced semiconductor ecosystem able to produce chips tailored for next-generation AI systems, rather than only memory modules. Analysts expect this kind of development to become critical as AI models multiply in size, energy demands climb, and countries fight to secure both talent and core intellectual property.

Tesla Launches Lower-Priced Model 3 in Europe to Combat Sales Slump and Chinese Competition

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Tesla launched the new, lower-priced version of its Model 3 sedan in Europe on Friday, two months after its U.S. debut. This aggressive pricing move is a critical part of CEO Elon Musk’s efforts to revive the company’s core automotive business amid a prolonged and severe downturn in demand that has seen Tesla’s global sales contract for the better part of two years.

The launch of the Model 3 Standard is a direct tactical response to the softening demand across Europe, where new registrations have fallen sharply this year, forcing Musk to pivot away from a singular focus on premium vehicles. Tesla’s European sales have been in sharp decline for most of 2025, with registrations slumping 33% in the first eight months of the year, even as the broader Electric Vehicle (EV) market expanded.

This sharp reversal has seen many buyers opt for cheaper, fresher competitor vehicles such as the Volkswagen ID.3 and the aggressively priced Chinese rival BYD’s Atto 3.

De-Contenting for the Mass Market

The new entry-level Model 3, described by Tesla as having an “ultra-low cost of ownership,” achieves its reduced price through calculated cost-cutting, known as “de-contenting,” rather than a fully new architecture.

The Model 3 Standard is a stripped-down version that eliminates or downgrades several premium features found in higher trims, now renamed “Premium.”

Feature Downgraded/Removed Standard Model 3 (Europe) Premium Model 3 (Europe)
Audio System Downgraded to a 7-speaker system; no subwoofer or amplifier Premium 15-speaker system with subwoofer
Interior Textile and vegan leather seats; no heated rear seats or ventilation Full vegan leather; heated and ventilated front seats
Lighting No Ambient Lighting (only footwell and door pocket lights) Full ambient interior lighting
Convenience Manual folding side mirrors; manually adjustable steering column Power-folding mirrors; power-adjustable steering column
Battery/Range Smaller battery pack (~69.5 kWh usable capacity) Larger pack (~80 kWh)

Despite these omissions, the car still offers a respectable driving range above 300 miles (480 km) and is expected to begin customer deliveries in the first quarter of 2026.

Aggressive Pricing to Stop the Bleeding

The pricing is designed to immediately close the competitive gap with its rivals.

Country Model 3 Standard Price (Local Currency) USD Equivalent (Approx.)
Germany €37,970 $44,299.60
Norway 330,056 NOK $32,698
Sweden 449,990 SEK $47,820

In Germany, the Model 3 Standard’s €37,970 starting price directly undercuts the widely popular Chinese-made BYD Atto 3 by a slim margin, but still faces threats from even cheaper EVs that price below €30,000. This aggressive stance follows the October launch of a lower-cost Model Y crossover, confirming Musk’s shift away from his scrapped plan for an all-new $25,000 EV in favor of building lower-priced versions of existing models.

AI Pivot vs. Near-Term Revenue

Musk has largely diverted attention from the sales weakness by emphasizing the company’s long-term pivot toward artificial intelligence (AI), specifically focusing on robotaxis and humanoid robots. However, analysts caution that the immediate financial viability of the company still rests on its core business.

While Musk has promised a future centered on AI and driverless services, these new, aggressively priced Model 3 and Model Y variants are seen as the key drivers of near-term revenue growth and vital to stemming the tide of declining global sales that have made investors uneasy.

Tesla hopes to convert millions of price-sensitive European consumers into buyers and restore momentum in a market it once decisively dominated by making calculated compromises on features.

Review of DTCC and EY Report on the Shift to 24×5 Trading in U.S. Equities

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The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) and Ernst & Young LLP (EY US), titled “The Shift to 24×5 Trading: What It Means for U.S. Equity Markets”, explicitly highlights how the rise of 24×7 crypto markets is fueling global investor demand for extended trading hours in traditional U.S. equities.

The report analyzes industry surveys and trends, projecting that up to 10% of total U.S. equity volume could trade during overnight sessions by 2028, driven largely by this convergence of crypto-inspired expectations and global participation.

The report notes that the convergence of securities and crypto brokerages is a major catalyst, as retail and institutional investors accustomed to crypto’s near-continuous access (24×7) now expect similar availability for U.S. stocks.

This “always-on” mindset is particularly strong among Asia-Pacific (APAC) investors, who represent a growing share of global demand and face time-zone barriers with current U.S. market hours typically 9:30 AM–4:00 PM ET.

Regulatory permissiveness and surging international interest—especially from APAC—are key factors pushing the industry toward 24×5 trading Sunday 8:00 PM ET to Friday 8:00 PM ET, with brief pauses. The report emphasizes that extending hours aligns U.S. markets with a “global, always-on investor base,” reducing fragmentation and enhancing accessibility.

Based on surveys of market participants, 1–10% of equity volume is expected to migrate to overnight sessions by 2028. This could reshape liquidity patterns, with implications for pricing, volatility, and execution.

Nearly 60% of firms surveyed plan upgrades to technology, risk management, and liquidity tools to handle extended hours. Key areas include: Updating circuit breakers, surveillance, and Securities Information Processor (SIP) data feeds for real-time accuracy.

Managing intraday liquidity and collateral in a non-stop environment, drawing lessons from crypto’s 24/7 operations. DTCC is extending its clearing hours to support this shift, starting mid-2026, to bolster market safety.

Mark Nichols, Principal and Capital Markets Strategy Leader, EY US: “Extending trading hours represents a significant step for U.S. equity markets, aligning market structure with the expectations of an increasingly global, always-on investor base.”

Through this collaboration with DTCC, we aim to equip market participants with clear, actionable insights on navigating the complex firmwide implications and operating model considerations of a 24×5 trading environment—helping the industry collectively build a more accessible and resilient marketplace.

Val Wotton, Managing Director and Global Head of Equities Solutions, DTCC: “As interest in near round-the-clock trading of U.S. equities grows, we are meeting this demand by extending our clearing hours to support our clients and further strengthen the safety and soundness of the markets.”

This report builds on ongoing SEC approvals and exchange initiatives, such as NYSE Arca’s plan for 22-hour trading sessions 1:30 AM–11:30 PM ET Monday–Thursday, launching late 2026 and FINRA’s expansion of trade reporting facilities.

These projections center on the anticipated migration of trading activity to “overnight” sessions outside traditional 9:30 a.m.–4:00 p.m. ET hours, influenced by global investor demands, crypto market parallels, and regulatory shifts.

The report estimates that 1%–10% of total U.S. equity volume could shift to overnight sessions by 2028. This represents a potential multi-billion-dollar notional value increase, given that average daily U.S. equity volume exceeds $500 billion in notional terms based on recent market averages.

Currently, overnight volumes hover at ~1% of total daily notional traded, primarily in limited after-hours activity via electronic communication networks (ECNs) and alternative trading systems (ATS). The projected range suggests a 10x potential uplift at the high end, though the lower bound implies minimal disruption.

63% of surveyed participants anticipate an increase in overnight volumes, aligning with key milestones like the National Securities Clearing Corporation’s (NSCC) extended clearing hours launch on June 28, 2026.

Medium-Term (by 2028): 74% expect meaningful changes, with the 1%–10% range materializing as exchanges (e.g., NYSE Arca) roll out 22-hour sessions starting late 2026.

The range accounts for optimistic (10%) vs. conservative (1%) outcomes. High-end scenarios assume strong retail adoption and APAC inflows; low-end ones factor in slower infrastructure buildout or regulatory hurdles.

The projections stem from a DTCC-led survey of 95 market participants across 84 firms, including 72 NSCC members. Respondents were queried on expected volume shifts over 2–3 years, operational readiness, and risk perceptions. This sample skews toward sell-side and clearing entities, providing a practitioner lens but potentially underrepresenting pure buy-side views.

Overnight sessions may see thinner books, leading to wider bid-ask spreads potentially 2–5x daytime levels and price dislocations, deterring all but opportunistic traders. Extended hours strain surveillance, raising fraud risks in a less-regulated environment.

~60% of firms plan tech upgrades, but staffing shortages and system downtimes could bottleneck growth. DTCC’s enhanced margining mitigates this, but asymmetric liquidity might inflate default risks by 10–20% in stress scenarios.

A 1%–10% overnight shift could redistribute ~$5–50 billion in daily notional, fostering a more globalized U.S. market but introducing volatility spillovers, It aligns equities with forex/commodities’ extended hours, potentially boosting overall efficiency by 5–10% via reduced settlement delays.

As the U.S. clearing powerhouse, DTCC’s infrastructure is “future-proofed” for 24×5, with the 2026 NSCC transition as a proving ground. Projections underscore DTCC’s role in risk mitigation—e.g., dynamic intraday margins could capture 20–30% more collateral in volatile overnight trades—enhancing systemic resilience.

DTCC’s projections paint a plausible, retail-led evolution toward 24×5 trading, with the 1%–10% range by 2028 signaling modest but transformative growth. Success hinges on liquidity bootstrapping and risk harmonization; absent these, volumes may cluster at the lower end.

This analysis positions the shift as evolutionary rather than revolutionary, borrowing crypto’s playbook to modernize equities. Crypto’s role is echoed in related discussions, where lessons from perpetual swaps and DeFi are informing equities’ evolution toward frictionless, global access.