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Euro stablecoins could drive more sovereign bond demand than you’d think

euro stablecoin

The European Central Bank published its latest Macroprudential Bulletin this week, featuring a series of articles on tokenization spanning tokenized money market funds through to stablecoins. One of the standout pieces explores how the growth of euro denominated stablecoins could affect euro area sovereign bond markets, and the findings challenge some intuitive assumptions.

The most striking insight is that the sovereign bond impact depends less on how stablecoin reserves are composed than on where the money to buy stablecoins comes from. If stablecoins attract foreign capital or replace retail deposits, sovereign bond demand increases substantially. But if wholesale financial customers divert funds into stablecoins, the net effect on sovereign bond demand could even turn negative. The difference between those scenarios is wide, ranging from a meaningful boost to sovereign bond demand to a small net reduction.

Under MiCAR, e-money token (EMT) issuers that are not banks must hold at least 30% of their reserves (60% for significant issuers) as deposits at credit institutions, with the remainder in low risk assets such as sovereign bonds. Given that heavy deposit weighting, one might assume the sovereign bond market impact would be modest. In practice, the ECB’s analysis suggests otherwise.

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