Another example of using USDC as a "medium of exchange" is the Singapore-based Grab app, a Southeast Asian ride-hailing, food delivery, and grocery service super app with over 180 million users. In September 2023, Grab announced that they had partnered with Circle to create a web3 wallet that supports USDC payments and NFT government vouchers and food vouchers. Today, consumers can use USDC on Ethereum and Solana as a means of recharging their Grab wallets.
So, we see that today USDC is gaining more and more support and integrating with traditional payment channels, merging the Internet financial system with traditional financial services. But as a means of payment, how do stablecoins compare to existing digital payment systems such as the Automated Clearing House (ACH)?
In many existing systems, such as ACH, funds and information are moved separately in centralized ledgers. If Alice makes a transaction to Bob via ACH or credit card, the transaction will first be marked as "pending" and will not be completed until up to a few days later. This is because at the time of the transaction, the system only sends a "message" that the transaction has occurred, and does not move the funds themselves. The funds are credited asynchronously, sometimes with a delay of several days.
A key advantage of stablecoin payments over these traditional systems is that the funds and information flow simultaneously. Therefore, when Alice makes a stablecoin transaction to Bob, Bob receives the full amount of funds the moment the transaction information is sent, just like a cash payment. In this way, stablecoins as a payment mechanism represent a technological leap forward over many existing settlement solutions and are better suited to play the role of the "digital dollar" in the future.
Legal and Regulatory Perspectives on Stablecoins
Like any emerging technology, stablecoins raise a number of legal and regulatory issues. As stablecoins such as USDC move into the mainstream, a key concern is that they could become a tool for malicious actors to conduct money laundering, terrorist financing, and evade sanctions. This is particularly important as the connection between traditional financial services and stablecoins matures over time to create a new internet-based financial system; a focus on improving regulatory compliance for stablecoin products is needed.
In this article, we have highlighted how Circle is committed to making USDC a regulated, transparent, stable currency, issued by an issuer that prioritizes regulatory compliance. As a regulated money transmitter, Circle complies with relevant FINCEN guidelines and state money transmitter laws, and all U.S. users of Circle Mint are subject to anti-money laundering and know-your-customer regulations, such as the Patriot Act.
However, while it is necessary to introduce compliance to prevent malicious actors from abusing stablecoins such as USDC, this regulation should be more sophisticated and fine-tuned to protect the interests of everyday consumers who want to use USDC; creating a regulatory system that excludes everyday consumers, especially those who have been marginalized by the existing financial system, is not in the best interest of the United States.
Today, the two main regulators attempting to regulate stablecoins in the United States—the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)—were established long before the invention of the modern internet, let alone digital assets such as cryptocurrencies and stablecoins. Today’s regulators are still using tools from more than 90 years ago, and while some guidelines are still useful in certain situations, regulators need to consider particularly carefully how to apply existing rules to this new industry and develop new rules to effectively regulate new activities based on blockchain technology innovations.
While the blockchain industry can make some technological innovations, such as decentralized digital identity systems, which make it easier to balance end-user privacy needs and regulatory requirements, this alone is not enough to fill this regulatory gap. Congress should act to increase regulatory clarity around stablecoins and digital assets as a whole, and new legislation such as the draft Stablecoin Transparency Act represents a step in the right direction.
Several other jurisdictions, including the European Union, have gone further than the United States in this regard. Recently, the European Union introduced the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), which will be fully implemented in December 2024. The core innovation of MiCA is that it seeks to create an entirely new regulatory framework for digital assets, including provisions such as mandatory liquid reserves for stablecoin issuers, restrictions on non-euro-denominated stablecoins, and a unified authorization system for the EU's 450 million citizens. MiCA represents a major step forward in increasing regulatory clarity for stablecoin and digital asset regulation, and Circle's stablecoin is one of the first global stablecoins to comply with MiCA regulations. Based on its work in complying with MiCa, Circle's products are well-positioned to gain adoption in the EU and become the leading compliant stablecoin.
Therefore, the U.S. Congress has a strong incentive to take action on stablecoin legislation. Regulated, dollar-denominated stablecoins like USDC can greatly advance U.S. interests in the digital asset space. USDC’s reserve mandate means that there will always be demand for U.S. Treasuries. As of June 2024, stablecoins are the 18th largest holder of U.S. debt, holding more Treasuries than South Korea or Germany. This number will only increase as demand for stablecoins and digital assets grows. In other words, demand for dollar-denominated stablecoins translates directly into demand for dollars and U.S. debt. Congress must therefore increase regulatory clarity in the digital asset space to further strengthen the power of the dollar in the digital age.
Since their inception a few years ago, stablecoins like USDC have come a long way to become one of the most compelling use cases for blockchain technology. The core idea of stablecoins is to bring the interoperability, composability, and accessibility of the Internet to traditional monetary institutions, and USDC is leading the way in building a secure and transparent “digital dollar.”
In the coming years, as stablecoin products, adoption, and regulation mature and develop, we can expect millions of businesses and individuals to adopt new open standards for financial transactions. In this sense, Circle's mission is to realize the unfinished promise of the Internet - to bring the openness and transparency of the Internet to the monetary field and ultimately build an Internet financial system.