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The IMF stopped fighting stablecoins and started designing them

From crypto-side niche to system-level infrastructure — the Fund's 2026 research agenda marks a historic shift in how the world views digital dollars

by Moses Edozie
2 hours ago
in Opinion
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
IMF warns of rising stablecoin risk in weaker economies

Dollar-pegged stablecoins could undermine central bank control in weaker economies, IMF warns

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Between December 2025 and June 2026, the International Monetary Fund published three reports that quietly abandoned its decade-long stance that stablecoins are primarily a threat to financial stability, recasting them instead as permanent infrastructure the Fund now wants to help design.

The Fund now openly acknowledges that stablecoins are improving cross-border payments, facilitating remittances, supporting tokenized finance, and becoming deeply embedded in emerging economies. Rather than debating whether they should exist, IMF researchers are increasingly focused on how they should be governed.

The message is unmistakable:

Stablecoins are no longer a crypto niche. They have become system-level infrastructure.

Stablecoins have crossed the threshold

The IMF’s December 2025 report, Understanding Stablecoins, highlighted just how rapidly the sector has expanded.

Metric Value
Total market capitalization ~$300 billion
USDT and USDC combined ~$260 billion
Annual transaction volume $23 trillion
User wallets 420 million+
USD-backed share 97%

The Fund projects that stablecoins could reach $3 trillion by 2030 if current growth trends continue.

That projection alone illustrates how dramatically the conversation has shifted. What was once dismissed as a speculative side market is now being analyzed as a permanent component of global finance.

Beyond crypto trading

Perhaps the most important change in IMF thinking is its recognition that stablecoins have escaped the crypto ecosystem.

According to IMF research, stablecoins are increasingly used for:

  • Cross-border payments.
  • Low-cost remittances.
  • Tokenized asset settlement.
  • Treasury management.
  • Programmable financial applications.

Cross-border stablecoin activity reached record highs during 2025, overtaking Bitcoin and Ethereum transfers.

This evolution matters because it means stablecoins are no longer simply tools for traders. They are becoming mechanisms for moving value across borders more efficiently than traditional payment systems.

Emerging markets are leading adoption

The IMF’s data shows that adoption is strongest where traditional financial systems are weakest.

Region Trend
Asia Highest activity
Africa Fastest growth
Latin America Rapid adoption
Middle East Strong expansion

In countries suffering from inflation or currency instability, stablecoins increasingly serve as savings instruments and payment rails.

Nigeria stands out.

Roughly 40% of crypto users in Nigeria employ digital assets for international transfers, according to IMF analysis. In several high-inflation economies, transaction volumes have grown more than 300% year over year.

What began as a speculative technology has become economic infrastructure.

For millions of users, stablecoins are not an investment.

They are a necessity.

Why Washington suddenly cares

Another reason for the IMF’s changing tone lies in the U.S. Treasury market.

Stablecoin issuers now hold more Treasury securities than several sovereign nations.

That transforms stablecoins into important participants in the world’s most critical debt market.

The Fund notes that even relatively small increases in stablecoin issuance can affect short-term Treasury yields.

In other words, digital dollars are no longer operating outside traditional finance.

They are becoming part of it.

Three reports reveal the shift

The IMF’s recent research agenda outlines a clear progression.

Understanding Stablecoins (December 2025)

This report established three key conclusions:

  • Stablecoins are not legally equivalent to dollars.
  • Emerging markets use them differently from developed economies.
  • The major vulnerabilities are governance and reserve quality, not blockchain technology.

Making Stablecoins Stable (April 2026)

This working paper addressed how stablecoins should be designed.

Using bank-run models, IMF researchers concluded that issuers have incentives to pursue risky assets in search of higher returns.

Their solution:

  • Safe reserves.
  • Strong regulation.
  • Improved governance.

The significance is profound.

The IMF is no longer merely warning about stablecoins.

It is helping design them.

Tokenized Finance Could Outrun Central Banks (May 2026)

IMF Financial Counselor Tobias Adrian argued that tokenization represents a structural shift in financial architecture.

His warning was straightforward:

Traditional settlement delays act as shock absorbers. Instant settlement removes those buffers, potentially allowing crises to spread faster than central banks can react.

Stablecoins, he argued, could become the weakest link in a highly automated financial system.

Yet even this warning accepted one reality:

Tokenization is permanent.

From containment to integration

Perhaps the clearest evidence of the IMF’s new thinking emerged in Nigeria.

During its 2026 Article IV consultation, the Fund urged Nigerian authorities to bring stablecoins and crypto assets into the regulatory perimeter.

The recommendation marked a sharp departure from earlier years, when policymakers often emphasized restriction.

Now the IMF’s position is different:

If stablecoins are already embedded in the economy, banning them becomes unrealistic.

Integration becomes the logical response.

The Fund has similarly called for:

  • Global regulatory standards.
  • Reserve transparency.
  • Legal certainty.
  • Interoperability.
  • Coordinated supervision.

Fragmented regulation, IMF researchers argue, creates opportunities for regulatory arbitrage and systemic risk.

The dollar’s digital edge

One of the most fascinating aspects of the IMF’s analysis concerns dollar dominance.

Stablecoins are effectively extending the reach of the U.S. dollar into emerging markets.

The Fund describes them as the “digital edge” of the dollar system.

That creates benefits and dangers simultaneously.

For households facing inflation, digital dollars offer stability.

For central banks, widespread adoption weakens monetary sovereignty.

Currency substitution remains one of the IMF’s biggest concerns.

When citizens abandon local currencies for dollar-backed assets, policymakers lose control over:

  • Interest rates.
  • Liquidity management.
  • Emergency lending.
  • Monetary transmission mechanisms.

Yet the IMF no longer presents this as an argument against stablecoins.

Instead, it treats it as a challenge that governments must manage.

Why this amounts to a global white flag

The Fund has effectively conceded five realities:

1. Stablecoins are infrastructure

They are no longer a niche product attached to crypto trading.

2. Their utility is proven

Particularly in emerging markets where traditional payment systems are expensive or unreliable.

3. Bans are impractical

Regulation and integration are more realistic than prohibition.

4. Dollarization is accelerating

Stablecoins are extending American monetary influence deeper into developing economies.

5. Global coordination is necessary

National approaches alone cannot govern borderless digital money.

The market moved first.

Policymakers are adapting afterward.

The challenge ahead

The IMF’s acceptance comes with an important warning.

Twenty-four-hour tokenized markets could eventually outpace central banks.

Automated liquidations, instant settlement and algorithmic feedback loops compress the time available for intervention during crises.

A weekend stablecoin panic could trigger fire sales before policymakers are even able to respond.

To address these risks, the IMF proposes five pillars:

  1. Safe-money settlement.
  2. Consistent regulation.
  3. Legal certainty.
  4. Interoperability standards.
  5. Central-bank tools capable of operating continuously.

These recommendations acknowledge a new reality:

Financial markets increasingly function around the clock.

Institutions designed for business-hour cycles must evolve.

Conclusion: the market already won

The IMF’s 2025-2026 research agenda represents one of the institution’s most important intellectual pivots in years.

Stablecoins are no longer treated merely as threats to monetary sovereignty.

They are recognized as permanent features of the financial landscape—bringing both enormous opportunities and significant dangers.

The Fund continues to warn about run risks, dollarization and systemic vulnerabilities.

But its posture has unmistakably changed.

Containment has given way to governance.

Opposition has given way to integration.

The four words that explain this transformation are not about blockchain or technology.

They are:

“The market already won.”

Stablecoins became indispensable before regulators fully understood them.

Now institutions like the IMF are trying to build the rules around a reality that already exists.

The debate is no longer whether stablecoins belong in the financial system.

The debate is how the financial system adapts to them.

Tags: cross-border paymentscurrency substitutiondigital dollardollar dominancefinancial stabilityimfIMF stablecoinsnigeriastablecoin adoptionStablecoin regulationstablecoinstokenized finance
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Moses Edozie

Moses Edozie

Moses Edozie is a writer and storyteller with a deep interest in cryptocurrency, blockchain innovation, and Web3 culture. Passionate about DeFi, NFTs, and the societal impact of decentralized systems, he creates clear, engaging narratives that connect complex technologies to everyday life.

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