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US SEC Chair Paul Atkins Signals a Pro-Innovation Era for Crypto and Tokenization

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During a keynote at DC Fintech Week, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Paul Atkins reaffirmed that cryptocurrency and asset tokenization are the agency’s “job one,” emphasizing a shift toward fostering innovation rather than stifling it through enforcement actions.

This comes amid broader efforts under the Trump administration to position the U.S. as the “crypto capital of the planet,” marking a stark departure from the previous administration’s approach under Gary Gensler, which Atkins has criticized as “regulation by enforcement” that drove innovation offshore.

Atkins, who assumed the SEC chairmanship in April 2025 after being nominated by President Trump, outlined a vision for “clear rules of the road” to support crypto asset issuance, custody, and trading. He jokingly rebranded the SEC as the “Securities and Innovation Commission,” underscoring his commitment to adapting regulations for blockchain-based technologies.

Atkins views tokenization—converting real-world assets like real estate or securities into digital tokens on blockchain—as a way to enhance liquidity and capital formation. He stated, “If it can be tokenized, it will be tokenized,” and highlighted the need for regulatory updates to accommodate on-chain securities without forcing firms abroad.

The SEC is exploring conditional exemptive relief, akin to regulatory sandboxes in other countries, allowing registrants and non-registrants to test new products and services that don’t fit existing rules. This would impose principles-based conditions focused on investor protection rather than prescriptive requirements.

Atkins advocated for “super-apps” where broker-dealers can offer services for traditional securities, tokenized assets, and non-security cryptos like staking and lending under one federal regime. This includes modernizing alternative trading systems (ATS) and enabling national exchanges to list crypto assets.

Moving away from ad-hoc enforcement, the SEC will use notice-and-comment rulemaking, interpretive guidance, and exemptions. Atkins pledged collaboration with Congress, the CFTC, and the administration, including support for bills like the GENIUS Act, which passed the House in July 2025 to clarify DeFi regulations.

Crypto Task Force Roundtables: Launched in May 2025, these focused on tokenization, custody, and trading, with a June roundtable on DeFi. The task force aims to tailor rules for non-security cryptos alongside securities.

In July 2025, the SEC greenlit the first U.S. Solana staking ETF, and issued guidance on digital asset disclosures. Atkins’ September 29, 2025, declaration of crypto as the SEC’s “number one task” triggered a 2.5% Bitcoin surge, signaling investor optimism.

The crypto sector has hailed Atkins’ approach as a “landmark moment,” with figures like Ethereum developer Eric Conner calling it a win for DeFi. However, critics like Sen. Elizabeth Warren have raised concerns over potential consumer protection gaps in the GENIUS Act.

This pro-innovation pivot aligns with the administration’s goals but will require balancing growth with safeguards. As Atkins noted in May 2025, the SEC must “keep pace with innovation” to avoid losing ground to global competitors.

Clear rules and exemptions like the regulatory sandbox could spur U.S.-based crypto and tokenization projects, reducing offshore migration. Simplified issuance, custody, and trading rules may increase liquidity and adoption of tokenized assets, potentially driving market rallies.

Integrated Platforms: “Super-apps” enabling mixed-asset trading could streamline operations for broker-dealers and enhance investor access to crypto and traditional securities.

Shift from enforcement to rulemaking (e.g., GENIUS Act support) may reduce legal uncertainties, encouraging institutional participation. Critics warn that rapid deregulation could weaken investor safeguards, necessitating careful rule design.

Aligning regulations with innovation could position the U.S. as a crypto hub, countering jurisdictions with established frameworks. Ongoing SEC task force outcomes and Congressional coordination will shape these impacts.

Crypto Analyst Calls Bitcoin A Much Better Buy Asset Than Gold, as Grayscale Releases Q4 2025 List of Assets Under Consideration

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Crypto analyst and Investor Miles Duetscher, believes that Bitcoin has superseded Gold to become a far superior asset for purchase.

He made this statement in response to a post on X that stated that Gold has been very much outperforming Bitcoin since the start of March. He replied, “BTC is a much better buy than Gold now”.

While the speed of gold’s rise is remarkable, Deutscher argues that Bitcoin presents a more asymmetric opportunity moving forward. He suggests that much of gold’s upside may already be priced in after this year’s extraordinary performance.

His remarks come as gold continues its upward price trajectory, hitting a new record high of $4250. The asset is reportedly adding nearly $300 billion in market capitalization per day a figure equivalent to Bitcoin’s entire market value every 24 hours.

The swift upward price movement has been much faster than analysts had predicted, bringing the total gains to nearly 100% since the current run started in early 2024.

Since March, gold has dominated global asset charts, surging over 105% year-to-date, while Bitcoin’s gains have been relatively moderate. Notably, the soaring price of the asset has captured investors’ hearts and wallets and resulted in visible long lines of people forming outside gold dealers in Sydney and Hong Kong to get their hands on the precious metal.

Several reasons have been predicted to impact the current uptrend of Gold. These include greater economic uncertainties from increasing government debt levels and the current US government shutdown which began on October 1, 2025. This has forced many to store assets in Gold as a haven.

There are also growing worries about the independence of the US Federal Reserve. If political interference pushes down US interest rates, that could see a resurgence in inflation. Gold is traditionally seen as a hedge against inflation.

A Goldman Sachs report from late last month predicted the climb, forecasting that the price of gold will rise 6% through the middle of 2026 to $4,000 per troy ounce, a unit of measurement used for precious metals. The report categorized buyers of gold into two groups: conviction buyers, who purchase the metal consistently, and opportunistic buyers, who jump in “when they believe the price is right”.

Despite Gold’s upward trajectory, charts circulating on social media highlight the stark contrast between Bitcoin which has been consolidating between $110,000 and $115,000 price range. However, Deutscher’s statement seems to focus not on past or current performance but rather on marginal opportunity and forward-looking growth.

Bitcoin thrives on volatility, speculative inflows, and technological adoption. Unlike gold which traditionally is a store of value in times of risk aversion, the latter serves as a “call option on the digital future.” Gold’s meteoric rise could signal overcrowding and excessive enthusiasm, while Bitcoin’s current price action still allows for considerable upside potential, particularly as macroeconomic sentiment fluctuates.

As the United States grapples with its first government shutdown in six years, Bitcoin has emerged as a significant beneficiary, reflecting a growing trend of investors seeking refuge in decentralized assets during periods of political and economic instability.

The notion of Bitcoin as a safe-haven asset is gaining traction among investors. Similar to gold, Bitcoin is perceived as a hedge against currency devaluation and economic instability. This perception is bolstered by the U.S. government’s establishment of the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, which aims to position Bitcoin as a national reserve asset.

Furthermore, the Trump administration’s supportive stance on cryptocurrencies has contributed to a favorable environment for digital assets. This includes initiatives such as the GENIUS Act, which seeks to promote innovation in the digital asset space. Even as gold rallies, some investors may see it as slower-moving or constrained in further upside, making Bitcoin relatively more attractive in a growth-seeking portfolio.

Grayscale Releases Q4 2025 List of Assets Under Consideration

Grayscale Investments updated its quarterly list of digital assets under consideration for potential inclusion in future investment products. This release aligns with the end of Q3 and provides insights into the firm’s evolving view of the crypto ecosystem as it heads into Q4.

The list highlights tokens not yet featured in Grayscale’s existing single-asset or multi-asset products but deemed promising by their research team. Grayscale emphasizes that this is a dynamic evaluation, subject to changes based on market developments, regulatory shifts, and quarterly re-reviews—typically updated every 15 days post-quarter-end.

The list supports Grayscale’s mission to broaden investor access to diverse digital assets, complementing their current portfolio of over 20 products managing billions in assets.

Assets already in Grayscale products as of October 9, 2025 include staples like Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Solana (SOL), and others in multi-asset trusts such as the Grayscale Digital Large Cap Fund.

While the full list isn’t enumerated in summaries, Grayscale’s Q3 research insights point to high-potential sectors like smart contract platforms, financials (e.g., DeFi tokens), and emerging narratives such as stablecoin adoption and digital asset treasuries.

Recent additions to their “Top 20” watchlist include Avalanche (AVAX) and Morpho (MORPHO), signaling interest in layer-1 scalability and lending protocols. Exclusions like Lido DAO (LDO) and Optimism (OP) reflect a focus on volatility-adjusted returns and fundamentals.

This comes amid a bullish Q3 for crypto, where all six of Grayscale’s proprietary “Crypto Sectors” developed with FTSE/Russel posted positive returns, led by financials due to rising centralized exchange volumes.

For Q4, Grayscale anticipates tailwinds from Federal Reserve rate cuts and regulatory clarity like stablecoin legislation, but warns of risks like U.S. labor market weakness and geopolitical tensions.

The firm notes Bitcoin’s relative underperformance in Q3, hinting at an “alt season” pattern that could influence Q4 allocations. Investors often use this list as a portfolio signal, given Grayscale’s $20B+ AUM and history of launching trusts.

Polymarket Launches Up/Down Equities Markets

Prediction market platform Polymarket rolled out “up/down” markets for equities, indices, and commodities, enabling users to bet on whether asset prices will close higher or lower by specific deadlines.

This expansion, backed by a major investment from Intercontinental Exchange ICE, parent of the NYSE, marks Polymarket’s deepest foray into traditional finance yet, shifting from its election-heavy focus to broader economic and corporate events.

Users wager on binary outcomes (e.g., “Will NVIDIA stock close up or down by October 15?”) using USDC. Contracts resolve based on closing prices from reliable sources like The Wall Street Journal and Nasdaq. No brokerage account or margin trading required—ideal for crypto-native speculators.

Organized into categories like Equities single stocks, Earnings, Indices (e.g., S&P 500), Commodities, Acquisitions, IPOs, Fed Rates, Treasuries, and Business. Early volume hit $176K on NVIDIA contracts alone.

This follows Polymarket’s U.S. reentry after a CFTC no-action letter and last month’s earnings markets debut. The platform’s valuation recently soared to $9B via ICE’s up-to-$2B investment, fueling tokenization partnerships. September trading volume across Polymarket and rivals like Kalshi topped $1.4B, driven by institutional interest.

The move blurs lines between prediction markets and TradFi, offering directional bets without traditional barriers. It could boost liquidity in niche events while attracting retail users wary of stock apps. Early markets show tight odds, like 3% implied volatility on short-term NVDA moves.

Coinbase Adds BNB to Asset Listing Roadmap

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In a surprising development amid ongoing debates over exchange listing practices, Coinbase has added BNB—the native token of rival exchange Binance and the BNB Chain—to its official asset listing roadmap.

This marks the first time Coinbase has signaled support for the asset, which ranks as the fourth-largest cryptocurrency by market cap.

The move was revealed on October 15, 2025, just minutes after Coinbase unveiled “The Blue Carpet,” a new issuer program offering free listings, direct access to the listings team, asset-page customization, and referral discounts for services like market-maker matching.

BNB’s addition to the roadmap at 4:45 p.m. UTC emphasizes a merit-based approach, with trading set to launch only after meeting liquidity and technical criteria—no fees required.

The decision comes amid industry criticism of listing standards, including accusations against Binance for demanding up to 8% of a project’s token supply and $2M in BNB deposits for listings.

Coinbase’s Jesse Pollak head of Base had publicly called for zero-cost listings, prompting calls to “lead by example” by adding BNB. Critics like Arca CIO Jeff Dorman have faulted Coinbase for inconsistent curation, but this step appears to address those concerns by embracing a revenue-backed token like BNB.

BNB’s price saw a brief uptick post-announcement, reflecting broader trends in cross-chain interoperability and regulatory clarity in the US and Europe. However, full listing isn’t guaranteed, pending infrastructure readiness.

Gold Sets New All-Time High Above $4,200

Gold futures shattered records yesterday, surging to a fresh all-time high (ATH) of $4,218.17 per troy ounce on October 15, 2025—eclipsing the prior peak of $4,014.60 from October 7.

The spot price hovered around $4,184.22 midday, up over 1.4% for the session and more than 50% year-to-date. Escalating US-China trade frictions, including renewed tariff threats on soybeans, rare earths, and shipbuilding under President Trump, have fueled safe-haven demand.

A weakening US dollar, expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts 75 bps by year-end, per Commerzbank, and strong central bank/ETF inflows (projected to hit 3,900 metric tons by end-2025) propelled the rally.

This is gold’s 45th ATH in 2025, with the climb from $3,500 to $4,000 taking just 36 days. It outperforms the S&P 500’s momentum and surpasses inflation-adjusted 1980 highs.

Analysts like UBS and Commerzbank see potential for $3,600 by year-end though recent surges suggest upside, with resistance at $4,084–$4,113. Pullbacks may occur if overbought conditions ease, but volatility favors bulls in uncertain times.

These events highlight intertwined market dynamics: crypto’s push for transparency amid rivalry, and gold’s enduring appeal as a hedge. The Blue Carpet, a comprehensive, fee-free program designed to streamline and enhance the asset listing process for digital token issuers.

Described by Coinbase as a “revamped asset-listing experience” aimed at onchain builders, the initiative consolidates previously fragmented services into a single, accessible bundle.

It emphasizes transparency, merit-based evaluation, and direct support, positioning Coinbase as a more collaborative gateway for projects entering the $3.75 trillion cryptocurrency market.

The Blue Carpet evokes a blue-themed nod to Coinbase’s branding, symbolizing a welcoming, structured pathway from application to post-listing growth. As per Coinbase’s official blog, it’s “our commitment to providing unparalleled support—from the moment you start building to long after your asset is live.”

This launch aligns with broader trends like tokenization projected to reach $10 trillion by BlackRock’s Larry Fink and regulatory pushes for compliant onchain assets, but it also arrives amid criticism of centralized exchange (CEX) gatekeeping.

In essence, The Blue Carpet is not just a procedural tweak; it’s a strategic pivot toward ecosystem-building, potentially onboarding $50 billion in new listings by 2027 while countering declining spot liquidity.

Key Features and Benefits

The program bundles tools and services to address common pain points in listings: opacity, delays often 6-12 months, and ancillary costs. All elements are free to apply for, with no prerequisites like marketing fees or service mandates— a direct rebuke to rivals accused of “pay-to-play” models.

Access is straightforward: Issuers apply via a dedicated portal, with vetting remaining merit-based—no guarantees, but roadmap inclusion (like BNB’s) signals intent pending liquidity and technical readiness.

Coinbase stresses that while perks encourage ecosystem alignment via custody or Base integration, they’re optional, preserving neutrality. The Blue Carpet emerges against a backdrop of industry scrutiny.

Just days prior, Coinbase executives like Jesse Pollak publicly advocated for “zero-cost listings,” echoing criticisms of Binance’s alleged demands for 8% token allocations or $2 million in BNB deposits.

Arca CIO Jeff Dorman and others had accused Coinbase of inconsistent curation, favoring low-traffic projects over established chains like BNB or Tron. By launching a transparent, no-fee program and immediately roadmapping BNB, Coinbase “leads by example,” thawing historical rivalries and signaling openness to cross-chain assets.

Spot volumes lag derivatives amid leverage dominance; enhanced listings could lift trading by 15%, stabilizing BTC in the $110K–$120K range. Aligns with U.S. FIT21 and EU MiCA, pressuring for CFTC oversight and hybrid finance. IMF mandates for adaptation further underscore compliant gateways.

Empowerment is clear—startups bypass regulatory drags like NY BitLicense’s 18-month waits, while established projects like Ripple gain DEX visibility. Emerging markets in African remittances via tokenized stables benefit from low-friction onboarding, potentially accelerating $300 billion in stablecoin growth.

However, it risks “ecosystem lock-in”: Perks subtly favor Coinbase tools, echoing Apple’s model and potentially sidelining competitors like Kraken. Greater asset diversity could enhance liquidity and reduce rugs post-FTX, 52% of scams tie to unvetted tokens.

BNB’s roadmap spotlights interoperability, with its 70% YTD gains underscoring cross-exchange potential. Analysts forecast 20+ quality listings by Q1 2026, countering USDC outflows and bolstering spot rails.

Competitive landscape pressures Binance to match transparency, fostering collaboration over cutthroat tactics. For DEXs like Uniswap, it hybridizes models, blending CEX compliance with DeFi speed.

The Blue Carpet marks Coinbase’s maturation from gatekeeper to enabler, blending TradFi discipline with Web3 openness in a tokenization-driven era. If executed rigorously—strong vetting, 20+ listings by early 2026, and regulatory alignment—it could catalyze $50 billion in inflows, reshape CEX dynamics, and legitimize onchain assets for institutions.

Recent Escalation in US-China Trade Tensions Deepens

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President Donald Trump explicitly confirmed that the United States is engaged in a trade war with China during a White House press briefing.

When asked about the potential for a new trade war following his announcement of 100% tariffs on Chinese exports effective November 1, Trump responded: “We’re in one now!” He emphasized that tariffs serve as a “crucial defense tool” against China’s actions, adding, “If we didn’t have tariffs, we would have no defense. They’ve used tariffs on us.”

This statement marks a sharp revival of hostilities after a fragile truce held since May 2025. The latest round stems from China’s October 10 restrictions on rare earth mineral exports—critical for manufacturing semiconductors, electric vehicles, and defense technologies—citing national security.

China dominates global supply over 80%, and these curbs were seen by the US as a direct economic weapon. Trump retaliated the same day via a Truth Social post and executive order, imposing sweeping tariffs and export controls on Chinese software and goods.

Targets $194B in Chinese imports down from $239B in 2024; threatens Boeing parts export curbs. Adds fees on US-linked vessels; antitrust probe into Qualcomm. At White House event; still mulls Xi meeting in Seoul unconfirmed by China.

This echoes the 2018-2020 trade war under Trump’s first term, which imposed tariffs on $360B in Chinese goods, but the current escalation risks broader fallout, including a potential “virtual trade embargo” if rates climb to 145% on the US side and 125% from China.

Stocks dipped 1-2% on October 10 amid tariff fears, with tech giant like Apple, reliant on Chinese supply chains hit hardest. Oil rose 1% on October 16 as India pledged to halt Russian imports, indirectly boosting US energy leverage.

Beijing’s commerce ministry called the US moves “threatening to intimidate” and vowed to “fight to the end,” warning of “very disruptive” retaliation like further sanctions on US firms. No official confirmation of a Trump-Xi summit at the APEC forum in late October.

Analysts warn of supply chain chaos, higher consumer prices like electronics up 10-15%, and slowed global growth. Gold hit all-time highs on October 16 amid safe-haven buying. On X, reactions range from market panic (“$SPY should sell off”) to criticism (“US is the aggressor”).

A Trump-Xi meeting could de-escalate, but with tariffs locked in until November 10 negotiations, the “trade war” label now fits Trump’s rhetoric. This positions the US to protect domestic manufacturing but risks alienating allies decoupling from China.

China’s expanded export controls on rare earth elements (REEs), announced on October 9, 2025, represent a significant escalation in the US-China trade war.

These controls require export licenses for a broader range of REEs now covering 12 elements and related products like magnets and devices containing trace amounts, extending to extraterritorial enforcement on foreign firms.

China processes ~90% of global REEs and mines ~70%, giving it immense leverage over supply chains for semiconductors, electric vehicles (EVs), defense systems, and renewable energy tech.

While Beijing claims the impact will be “limited” for compliant civil uses, US officials label it a “supply-chain power grab” threatening global stability. Short-term disruptions include license delays and cost spikes; long-term, it accelerates bifurcation and diversification efforts.

The controls disrupt at multiple stages: mining, processing, magnet production, and end-use integration. Neodymium, dysprosium in F-35 jets, submarines, drones, missiles, radar.

License denials for military-linked firms; US DoD reports 20-30% supply shortfall risk by Q1 2026. “Veto power” over US weapons production; potential for Chinese “Entity List” mirroring US sanctions.

Europium, yttrium in chips, lasers, etching; vital for Nvidia/Intel fabs. Backlogs in EU/Asia processing; Apple/Nvidia face 10-15% cost hikes, Nasdaq dipped 3.6% post-announcement.

Global chip shortages akin to 2021, but targeted; delays in AI hardware. Neodymium/praseodymium magnets for motors; terbium in batteries/wind turbines. Tesla/Ford/GM report EV production halts; EU VDA warns of battery shortages, prices up 15%.

License delays add 1-2 months to shipments; global firms like Samsung scramble for stockpiles. Inflation pass-through: US households could see $500-800 annual gadget price hikes.

These disruptions stem from China’s shift from raw export quotas from April 2025 limits on 7 REEs to comprehensive controls, including proof-of-non-military use. Analysts estimate 20-40% of global REE flows could face delays, with extraterritorial rules forcing foreign firms to self-police.

REE prices surged 15% in the week post-announcement, neodymium oxide up 12%, reversing a 33% YTD decline. However, broader controls could stabilize at higher levels, adding 5-10% to input costs for affected industries.

US rare earth miners like MP Materials +25% in 5 days and Lynas (Australia, +8.5%) rallied on diversification bets, while Chinese processors dipped 5-10%. Tech indices fell, with $2T US market wipeout on October 10.

IMF warns of “disruptive” retaliation spiral, potentially shaving 0.2-0.5% off 2026 global GDP. Europe reports “months-long” license backlogs, risking EV/renewable delays.

The US views this as “economic coercion” violating May 2025 Geneva truce, prompting:Tariffs & Controls: Trump’s 100% tariffs on $194B Chinese goods effective Nov 1 plus export curbs on US tech to China.

$400M Pentagon equity in MP Materials; new Texas/California processing plants. DoE backs Lynas/Australia partnerships for magnets. G7 coordination; US stakes in rare earth firms; EU/Japan recycling incentives. JPMorgan’s $10B fund targets US defense/AI/REE investments.

Alternatives need 5-10 years; short-term stockpiles cover 3-6 months for most firms. China signals de-escalation via “export control dialogues,” but experts predict deeper mistrust, hastening “bifurcated” chains US-led vs. China-centric.

A Trump-Xi meeting in late October, APEC could pause escalation, but tariffs lock in until Nov 10 talks. This “weaponization” of REEs underscores resource geopolitics: China gains leverage in chip ban disputes, while the US pushes re-industrialization.

It risks inflating costs like $2,400/household from existing tariffs and fragmenting trade, but could spur innovation in recycling/AI-optimized mining. Watch Nov 1 tariffs and license issuance rates for escalation signals—deeper decoupling seems inevitable, benefiting diversified players but punishing delay.

French Banking Giant ODDO BHF Launches EUROD, A MiCA-Compliant Euro Stablecoin

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ODDO BHF, a 175-year-old French banking group managing over €150 billion $173 billion in assets, announced the launch of EUROD, its first venture into the cryptocurrency space.

This euro-pegged stablecoin is designed to bridge traditional finance with blockchain, offering low-volatility digital euros for payments, trading, settlements, and treasury operations.

It’s fully compliant with the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation, ensuring transparency, full reserves, and redemption rights for users. Issued 1:1 against the euro, with reserves held by ODDO BHF Asset Management.

It emphasizes stability and regulatory oversight to appeal to risk-averse institutions and retail users. Built on the Polygon blockchain for fast, low-cost transactions. Issued in partnership with Fireblocks for secure custody.

Debuts on Bit2Me, a Madrid-based crypto exchange authorized under MiCA and backed by major players like Telefónica telecom giant, Unicaja, and BBVA Spanish banks. This partnership aims to accelerate adoption in Europe and Latin America.

It serves both retail investors for everyday digital payments and institutions for cross-border efficiency and DeFi integration. It positions itself as a regulated alternative to USD-dominated stablecoins like USDT or USDC.

EUROD joins euro stablecoins like Société Générale’s EURCV and Circle’s EURC; total stablecoin market cap exceeds $300B. This launch reflects a surge in European banks embracing stablecoins to counter U.S. dollar dominance in crypto.

Just last month, a consortium of nine banks including ING and UniCredit announced plans for a joint euro stablecoin by mid-2026. ODDO BHF’s move could enhance eurozone liquidity on-chain, reduce reliance on volatile fiat transfers, and boost fintech innovation—especially as MiCA fully takes effect.

While EUROD is a small player initially, its regulated status from a established bank like ODDO BHF could drive wider trust and adoption, signaling that crypto is no longer fringe—it’s becoming institutional infrastructure.

EUROD challenges the dominance of USD-pegged stablecoins, which dominate over 90% of the $300B+ stablecoin market. A euro-backed stablecoin could increase the euro’s role in global digital transactions, aligning with EU efforts to bolster its currency in crypto markets.

By providing a regulated, low-volatility digital euro, EUROD enhances on-chain liquidity for eurozone businesses and consumers, facilitating smoother cross-border payments and DeFi integration.

As a bank-issued stablecoin, EUROD signals growing institutional acceptance of blockchain, potentially encouraging other European banks to follow suit, especially after the recent announcement by nine banks for a joint euro stablecoin by mid-2026.

EUROD’s full compliance with the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation sets a benchmark for transparency, reserve backing, and user redemption rights. This could pressure non-compliant or offshore stablecoins to align with stricter standards or lose market share in Europe.

As one of the first MiCA-compliant stablecoins from a major bank, EUROD could serve as a template for other institutions, accelerating the adoption of regulated digital assets across the EU.

The EU’s robust regulatory framework, exemplified by EUROD, may push other jurisdictions to adopt similar standards, reshaping the global stablecoin landscape.

Built on Polygon, EUROD offers low-cost, fast transactions, making it attractive for retail payments and institutional use cases like settlements and treasury management. This could reduce reliance on costly traditional financial systems like SWIFT.

EUROD’s blockchain compatibility opens doors for decentralized finance applications, enabling euro-based lending, staking, or yield farming, which could attract fintechs and institutional investors to Web3. .

EUROD enters a competitive field with existing euro stablecoins like Société Générale’s EURCV and Circle’s EURC. Its success will depend on adoption, liquidity, and integration into major platforms beyond Bit2Me.

The planned euro stablecoin by nine major banks could overshadow EUROD unless it captures significant market share early. However, ODDO BHF’s first-mover advantage and established reputation may give it an edge.

A 175-year-old bank like ODDO BHF entering the stablecoin space signals that crypto is no longer a niche market but a core part of financial infrastructure. This could normalize digital assets for conservative investors and regulators.

EUROD’s launch may spur fintech innovation, encouraging startups to build euro-based DeFi protocols, payment apps, or tokenized asset platforms, further bridging traditional finance and blockchain.

By promoting a euro stablecoin, the EU could reduce reliance on U.S.-centric financial systems, aligning with broader strategic goals of financial sovereignty in the face of global economic shifts.

While Polygon offers low fees, EUROD’s long-term success depends on its ability to scale across other blockchains or platforms without compromising security or compliance.

EUROD’s launch marks a pivotal moment for European finance, blending traditional banking credibility with blockchain innovation. It strengthens the euro’s digital presence, aligns with MiCA’s regulatory push, and sets the stage for broader institutional adoption.