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Here’s a breakdown of what unfolds in that Stacker.News thread about stablecoins potentially buying U.S. Treasuries—plus fresh insights from recent reputable sources on how stablecoins may be reshaping banking and Treasury markets:

What the Stacker Post Highlights

The thread snapshots a user observing how stablecoins like Tether might become dominant holders of U.S. Treasuries—yielding up to ~4.15%—and offering attractive interest (e.g., 1.5%) to stablecoin holders, thus potentially outcompeting traditional bank checking accounts. It suggests that legacy banks are reacting—lobbying to amend the GENIUS Act to limit stablecoins' ability to pay interest, reflecting fear of deposit loss and fiscal shifts. (Stacker News)

Recent Insights from the Media and Academia

1. Regulatory & Banking Concerns

  • U.S. banks are lobbying to amend the GENIUS Act, arguing that while stablecoins cannot pay interest under current law, crypto exchanges can indirectly provide rewards—creating an uneven playing field and potentially sparking $6.6 trillion in deposit flight that could raise borrowing costs and reduce credit availability. (Financial Times)
  • Moody’s analysts warn that while significant effects on bank profitability (e.g., reduced fee income, higher funding costs) may take time, they are real risks—especially if stablecoins grow to offer routine payment advantages. (MarketWatch)
  • The Wall Street Journal underscores that stablecoin reserve flows may transform insured retail deposits into volatile, uninsured deposits, posing greater systemic risk—particularly for smaller banks. (The Wall Street Journal)

2. Treasury Market Dynamics

  • Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent anticipates stablecoins becoming a key buyer of U.S. Treasuries, potentially significantly boosting demand for short-term government debt. Currently, the stablecoin market stands at ~$250B, but could expand to $2 trillion. (Financial Times)
  • Reuters reports that the GENIUS Act’s requirement for stablecoins to be backed by liquid assets and disclose reserves could catalyze as much as $1 trillion in Treasury Bill demand over 3 years, depending on adoption rates. (Reuters)
  • A study from Barron’s shows major issuers (Circle, Tether) already hold over $168B in Treasuries and repos. This has modestly lowered short-term yield and could challenge the Fed’s control over interest rates as stablecoins scale. (Barron's)

3. Academic Findings

  • A paper in arXiv finds that by Q1 2025, Tether's holdings (~$98.5B in T-bills, ~1.6% of outstanding supply) substantially reduced 1-month Treasury yields—by approximately 24 basis points. This equates to roughly $15 billion in annual interest savings for the government. (arXiv)
  • Another working paper positions stablecoins as central to a “Banking 2.0” transformation—comparing their significance to stablecoins with that of AI—highlighting the structural shift toward a public-private hybrid monetary ecosystem powered by decentralized, digitally native money. (arXiv)

4. Risk and Stability Considerations

  • A letter responding to stablecoin-Treasury enthusiasm argues that without robust infrastructure—regulated custody, ETF-like transparency, real-time reserve reporting, and integration with capital markets—stablecoins risk instability and reputational damage. (Financial Times)
  • Reuters also notes that while stablecoins fuel liquidity, they do not expand credit, and may siphon away deposit-funded lending—their broader macroeconomic implications may remain mostly theoretical unless retail adoption increases. (Reuters)
  • An FT article likens stablecoins to bank deposits in all but name—raising concerns over regulatory clarity, lack of insurance coverage, and exposure to systemic banking shocks. It even suggests that tokenizing traditional deposits on blockchain could be a safer evolution. (Financial Times)

Summary Table: Stablecoin Disruption Landscape

AreaDisruption Insights
Banking SectorDeposit erosion, increased funding costs, pressure on traditional fee income, and risk to small banks.
Treasury MarketsNew structural demand for T-bills, yield compression, and potential stress on Fed control over rates.
Government DebtCould benefit via reduced interest costs (e.g., ~$15B/year from Tether’s demand).
System ResiliencePotential for runs, opacity risks, and lack of comparable infrastructure like traditional banking.
Future OutlookCould become a hybrid public-private money system—if backed by regulation, transparency, and market rigour.

Final Take

The Stacker post raised the right instincts: stablecoins are emerging as powerful players—potentially outsized holders of U.S. Treasuries and formidable competitors to traditional banks for deposit flows and yield offerings.
But what emerges from verifiable sources is a far more nuanced picture: Stablecoins are already influencing Treasury yields, challenging banking deposit models, and prompting legislative and regulatory pushback. Monetary authorities, investors, and banks are reacting—while researchers are warning that without strong infrastructure and transparency, stablecoins could amplify systemic fragilities, particularly in times of stress.