03 Nov, 2025

Monthly Ethereum Stablecoin Volume Hits Record $2.8 Trillion in October

The total monthly stablecoin volume on Ethereum soared to hit a new all-time high in October, as traders increasingly sought yield opportunities during the crypto market slowdown.

According to The Block's data, stablecoins on Ethereum saw a total of $2.82 trillion in onchain volume in October, surpassing the previous all-time high of $1.94 trillion set in September. This marks a 45% monthly growth.

Circle's USDC took the lead with $1.62 trillion in monthly volume, followed by USDT, which had a volume of $895.5 billion last month. Both stablecoins saw an increase in volume from the previous month.

Meanwhile, MakerDAO's DAI stablecoin ranked third with $136 billion, down from $141.2 billion in September and significantly lower than May's $470.7 billion.

"Stablecoins have been one of the hottest sectors over the past couple of months following the Circle IPO and the passage of the Genius Act," said Min Jung, research associate at Presto Research. "Yield farming, especially around 'liquid yield tokens,' has been highly active, and new stablecoins with innovative concepts are attracting users seeking yield."

Stablecoin volume rose last month as the crypto market retreated from its record-setting bull run toward more modest pricing. Bitcoin is down 11.5% in the past month to $108,229, while Ethereum is down 16.4% to $3,754.

Kronos Research CIO Vincent Liu noted that stablecoin volume surge indicates that traders were actively managing liquidity, preparing to buy price dips amid ongoing profit-taking in major cryptocurrencies.

"They're staging capital to rotate between emerging narratives, using stablecoins as a hedge and a yield-generating tool until deployment," Liu said.

The surge in volume positioned stablecoin issuers as the dominant revenue generators among crypto protocols, data shows.

Stablecoin issuers consistently managed around 65% to 70% of total daily revenue across major crypto protocol categories throughout October, beating others including lending platforms, decentralized exchanges, collateralized debt positions, and blockchain infrastructure.

Major issuers Tether and Circle base their earnings on the assets that back their stablecoins. They hold user deposits in relatively low-risk instruments like U.S. Treasuries and keep the accrued interest, making yield on reserves their core profit source.

"[October's] volume underscores a maturing crypto market, where stablecoin activity has grown for non-speculative use cases like payments and cross-border transactions," said Nick Ruck, director at LVRG Research.

05 Nov, 2025

Ripple Partners with Mastercard, WebBank, Gemini to Enable Stablecoin Settlement with RLUSD

Ripple has announced a collaboration with Mastercard (NYSE:MA) , WebBank, and Gemini (NASDAQ:GEMI). Together they’ll explore the use of Ripple USD (RLUSD) on the XRPL, a public blockchain built for efficient payments, in order support stablecoin settlement of fiat card transactions.The initiative is supposed to enable RLUSD, operating on the XRPL, to facilitate blockchain-powered settlement processes between Mastercard and WebBank, which is currently the issuer of the Gemini Credit Card.Sherri Haymond, Global Head of Digital Commercialization at Mastercard said that they are guided by their commitment to consumer choice and a principled approach to stablecoins—one that “emphasizes strong consumer protections, a level playing field, and regulatory compliance—they’re enabling settlement today while exploring how stablecoins can support future use cases.”After it has been implemented, this will mark one of the “first” collaborations where a regulated U.S. bank “settles traditional card transactions using a regulated stablecoin on a public blockchain.”This effort expands on Ripple’s work with Gemini and WebBank on the Gemini Credit Card, which launched “an XRP edition and serves as a model for how digital assets can be integrated into traditional payment programs.”Dan Chen, Chief Financial Officer at Gemini said that in this next phase of the collaboration, they’re demonstrating “how stablecoin settlement can be applied to an active card program, connecting blockchain innovation to real consumer payments.”With low costs, fast processing, and reliable performance, the XRPL offers a foundation for digital payments.XRP, the digital currency that powers the XRPL, continues to play a key role, helping “keep the network secure and enabling efficient transactions as newer assets like RLUSD expand its use.”RLUSD is a U.S. dollar–backed stablecoin issued “under the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) Trust Company Charter and backed by cash and cash-equivalent reserves.”Since launching in 2024, RLUSD has grown “to over $1 billion in circulation, supported by adoption across DeFi platforms, Ripple’s cross-border payment solution, and institutional partners.”In the coming ahead, the partners will reportedly carry out initial RLUSD onboarding on the XRPL, which is said to be subject to obtaining the required regulatory approvals, and start integration planning “within existing Mastercard and WebBank settlement processes.”

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31 Oct, 2025

Stablecoins Trigger a “Arms Race” Among Traditional Financial Giants

If 2020–2022 was a period of “trial phase” and 2023–2024 one of “exploration,” then 2025 has marked the era of full-speed adoption for stablecoins. Their growth has far outpaced expectations: annual stablecoin transaction volumes surged from a negligible $3.3 billion in 2018 to $18.4 trillion in 2024. This milestone not only signifies stablecoins’ evolution from niche experiments to core global payment rails but also surpasses the annual transaction throughput of legacy payment giants Visa ($15.7 trillion) and Mastercard ($9.8 trillion).Several high-profile developments in the past month have put this narrative in the spotlight:1️⃣ Citi formally partnered with Coinbase to expand digital asset payment capabilities for institutional clients.2️⃣ Nine major European banks formed a Euro stablecoin consortium, targeting issuance by 2026.3️⃣ Western Union announced plans to launch the USD-pegged stablecoin USDPT on Solana in 2026, with Anchorage Digital Bank handling issuance and custody.4️⃣ Visa disclosed settlement support for four stablecoins across four new blockchains.5️⃣ Mastercard aims to acquire stablecoin/crypto infrastructure firm Zero Hash for $1.5–2 billion and had previously competed with Coinbase over BVNK.Together, these developments reveal a clear trend: in the race to dominate the future of finance, traditional incumbents are unwilling to lag behind, actively transitioning their core businesses — from payment networks to cross-border settlement — onto programmable blockchain infrastructure.Banks: Stablecoins vs Tokenized DepositsAs traditional banks embrace digital assets, they face two distinct paths: stablecoins or tokenized deposits.Initially, Citi CEO Jane Fraser emphasized tokenized deposits over popular market stablecoins — not because stablecoins are inferior, but because tokenized deposits are “comfortable” for banks:🔷 Tokenized Deposits (Banks’ “Internal Rail”): These are essentially digital representations of customers’ fiat deposits. Think of it as issuing a digital pass for existing bank accounts. Fully regulated under central bank oversight, they are safe, compliant, and seamlessly integrate with legacy clearing systems, enabling 24/7 settlement between banks. For banks, this is the lowest-friction, most regulation-friendly approach.Yet having only an “internal rail” is insufficient.🔷 Stablecoins (Banks’ “External Rail”): To interact with the broader crypto ecosystem and public blockchains like Ethereum, banks must use stablecoins — universal tokens in the decentralized financial world.Citi’s strategy is therefore smart: while favoring tokenized deposits, it swiftly announced the Coinbase partnership.The dual-track approach serves one ultimate goal: whether the future money network runs on public chains or bank rails, traditional banks must control both forms of “digital money” to remain central as trusted clearing hubs in the emerging financial system.In Europe, nine banks (UniCredit, ING, Banca Sella, KBC, Danske, DekaBank, SEB, CaixaBank, Raiffeisen) are jointly advancing a Euro stablecoin, establishing a company in the Netherlands and seeking an e-money license under MiCA. The target: launch in H2 2026, emphasizing compliance, 1:1 reserves, and public-chain usability. The objective is clear: create a local digital payment rail to counterbalance the influence of US dollar stablecoins in Europe. This is a bank-led infrastructure play designed to mirror public-chain ecosystems.Western Union: Using Stablecoins to Upgrade the “Cash Endpoint”Unlike banks, which focus on improving internal clearing and settlement efficiency, Western Union sees stablecoins as a core component of its cross-border retail remittance infrastructure.As one of the world’s largest remittance providers, Western Union’s strength lies not in advanced fintech, but in its global network of physical cash points. Particularly in emerging markets, it controls the “last mile” where digital funds convert to cash, serving as a lifeline for unbanked users.Western Union’s strategy is straightforward: make stablecoins the “highway” of its remittance rails, integrating them with its cash network to create a smooth closed loop.1️⃣ Channel Selection: Partner with Anchorage to issue USDPT, running on Solana for high throughput and low fees — critical for high-frequency, low-value retail remittances.2️⃣ Network Construction: Launch a Digital Asset Network to ensure seamless flow: external wallet → stablecoin remittance → local cash pickup or deposit.3️⃣ User-Centric Execution: For cash-reliant users in emerging markets, priority is not blockchain per se, but immediate settlement, nearby cash access, and low fees. By hiding the complexity of blockchain infrastructure, Western Union leverages stablecoins to reinforce its dominance in global retail remittances.Card Giants: Connectors vs AcquirersVisa and Mastercard accelerate stablecoin integration from the perspective of global card networks, but with different strategies:1️⃣ Visa — Evolving into a “Multi-Chain Settlement Router”Visa increasingly positions itself as a multi-chain settlement network operator. This fiscal year, it added settlement support for four blockchains and four stablecoins, redeemable in 25+ fiat currencies. Transaction volumes linked to stablecoins have surged YoY, highlighting Visa’s core competence: bridging traditional bank accounts with on-chain digital funds, enabling seamless cross-chain settlement for banks, merchants, and wallet users.2️⃣ Mastercard — Fast-Track AcquisitionMastercard takes a more aggressive approach, acquiring infrastructure to rapidly secure time in the “on-chain payment race.” Its $1.5–2 billion bid for Zero Hash, coupled with deep discussions to acquire BVNK, shows a strategy focused on internalizing compliance custody, wallet routing, fund anchoring/redemption, and on-chain risk controls quickly, then scaling these capabilities across its global issuer, acquirer, and merchant network.In short: Visa excels at connecting, Mastercard at rapidly controlling infrastructure. Both recognise stablecoins as central to future payments.Risks RemainEven as giants race down the stablecoin track, formidable challenges persist. For banks and card networks, the main hurdles are not technical, but non-technical regulatory and operational barriers:1️⃣ Dollar Stablecoin “Intrusion”: Global stablecoin expansion touches a sensitive nerve: monetary sovereignty. A USD-pegged stablecoin dominating a small economy could erode central bank control, prompting regulatory pushback. This explains Europe’s cautious, bank-led Euro stablecoin path.2️⃣ Trust Stress Test — On-Chain Resilience: Translating “bank-grade robustness” onto blockchain demands readiness for trust crises and technical shocks:Run & Reserve Risk: Can stablecoins withstand mass redemptions?On-Chain Crises: Platforms must handle liquidity shortages, reserve volatility, network congestion, and cyberattacks.3️⃣ Compliance “Last Mile”: For models like Western Union’s, integrating blockchain efficiency into cash-centric flows requires navigating AML, forex controls, and multi-jurisdiction licenses.The operational and regulatory complexity far exceeds mere blockchain integration — explaining why Visa, Mastercard, and Citi opt for collaboration or strategic acquisitions rather than going it alone.ConclusionLooking at recent industry developments, the stablecoin wave is less about crypto “victory” and more a silent revolution in financial infrastructure. As “accounts + stablecoins” operate in parallel, users no longer perceive on-chain vs off-chain distinctions — only faster settlements, lower costs, and smoother experiences.Ultimately, the game comes down to familiar variables: network scale, fee curves, merchant acquisition, and risk & compliance execution. By Q4 2025, traditional finance is no longer standing on the sidelines.

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