
Members of the Community Depository Institutions Advisory Council (CDIAC) of the Federal Reserve have expressed concern that non-bank-published Stablecoins can accelerate the outflow of traditional banks of traditional banks and reduce the availability of credit for local communities.
According to the records of 10 April, the council members expressed fear of the pending legislation in the congress with regard to payment stablecoins and their regulatory treatment.
They compared the threat of deposit migration from banks to stablecoin platforms with the exodus of funds to money market investment funds in the late 20th century, which have substantially reformed the financial landscape.
Moreover, the Council stated that Stablecoins represent a digital analogue with that earlier wave of disinter mediation, which may be undermining the deposit base on which community banks trust to expand loans to companies and households.
Stablecoins Spiegel Risks of CBDCs
During the hearing, the Council linked the concern about Stablecoins to previous discussions about digital currency of Central Bank (CBDCs). In earlier meetings, CDIAC had warned members that CBDCs could pull deposits from the banking sector.
The dialogue of 10 April expanded that logic to private stablecoins, and describes them as just as able to distract funds from insured storage institutions.
The Council noted that CBDCs and payment staboins introduce competition for traditional bank deposits without necessarily being subject to equivalent legal supervision or liquidity requirements.
Members suggested that this could ask asymmetrical risk profile banks to reduce their credit capacity, in particular for small companies and community borrowers who are dependent on localized bank relationships.
Calls for supervision of Stabilein to tackle risks
Council members insisted on supervisors to include Stablecoins in broader supervisors that relate to financial stability, consumer protection and systemic risk.
They repeated that uncontrolled stablecoin issue, especially by non -banks, could weaken the financing base of regulated institutions and the credit channel that serves “Hoofdstraat” borrowers.
The Council also emphasized the importance of consistent supervision between banking and non -bank publisher and repeated concern about the potential for legal arbitration.
It encouraged policymakers to ensure that emerging regulatory efforts take into account the implications of the approval of the Stablecoin for core bank functions, in particular with regard to insured deposits and liquidity provision.
Fed -chairman Jerome Powell recently said that Stablecoins can be a digital product that can be quite wide during an event on 16 April.
He also encouraged the regulation of stablecoins and guaranteed that the FED is not going to prevent bank sectors from having interaction with the crypto industry.
