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Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
The writer is chief macro policy strategist at State Street Investment Management
Europe’s economic scale has never fully translated into financial power. The euro remains the world’s second reserve currency, yet it still lacks the depth, liquidity and singular “safe asset” status that underpin the dollar’s dominance. Fragmented capital markets and the absence of a common euro area sovereign instrument continue to limit the currency’s international role.
At a moment when doubts are spreading about global dependence on the dollar, Europe has an under-appreciated opportunity in stablecoins, the digital assets pegged in value to hard assets such as government bonds.
The euro area is quietly building institutional infrastructure that could allow it to advance in wholesale tokenised finance. The promotion of certain euro‑denominated stablecoins could further strengthen Europe’s financial architecture and, in practice, provide an approximate of a euro area safe asset without fiscal mutualisation, which Germany in particular continues to resist.
The first mechanism is structural. If a euro stablecoin’s reserves were invested in a transparent, rules‑based basket of euro area government bonds, the market would gain a single digital asset backed by a diversified pool of sovereign risk. This would be diversification without joint liability: no treaty change, no common treasury and no fiscal transfers. It would amount to a private wrapper around public debt.
Reserve allocation could mirror methodologies already used in asset purchases by Eurozone central banks, limiting excessive concentration either in the strongest credits for safety or weaker ones for yield. Such a structure would not eliminate sovereign spreads or replicate US Treasuries any time soon. But it would create a unified, scalable digital instrument backed by a broad cross‑section of euro area government debt — functionally similar to a synthetic safe asset.
The second mechanism is scale. Today, euro stablecoins account for only a sliver of the global market, reinforcing the dollar’s liquidity premium in digital finance. Yet liquidity is reflexive. If euro stablecoins became a meaningful part of on‑chain payments and tokenised securities, part of that premium could migrate towards the euro.
Growth would have mechanical consequences. Stablecoin reserves must be invested. A rising share of global transactions settled in euro tokens would translate into structurally higher demand for euro area sovereign bonds.
And Europe may hold an unexpected advantage. The ECB is preparing infrastructure that would allow euro area banks to settle tokenised transactions in central bank money. This would allow settlement of different tokenised assets to be synchronised and would anchor trust at the core of wholesale markets.
In such an architecture, regulated euro stablecoins would complement rather than compete with public money. They could function as cash‑like instruments at the application layer, while wholesale digital central bank money ensures final settlement. Rather than forcing a binary choice between central bank digital currency and private tokens, Europe is moving towards an ecosystem in which multiple forms of regulated digital money coexist — an approach that contrasts with the US reliance on private money alone.
Significant obstacles remain. Under the current MiCA framework, systemic euro stablecoins must hold a substantial share of reserves in bank deposits. While intended to protect financial stability, this requirement may make such coins less robust than those backed primarily by short‑dated sovereign debt, particularly in stress scenarios. If euro stablecoins are to approximate a safe asset, reserve composition matters.
The lack of yield is a second constraint. Stablecoins typically do not pass interest on to holders. For retail users this may be acceptable; for reserve managers and institutional investors it is not. As long as euro stablecoins remain strictly non‑yielding, there is little reason for official sector holders to prefer them to conventional instruments. A calibrated framework could allow limited yield pass‑through, or alternatively enable tokenised money market funds to perform a similar function.
If Europe treats stablecoin policy as a strategic lever rather than a peripheral regulatory file, it could narrow the longstanding gap between its economic weight and its financial influence — and discover that the path towards a euro area safe asset may run not only through treaty change, but through code.
John Orchard, chair of the Digital Monetary Institute at OMFIF, contributed to this article

