What happened?
The ECB and the European Systemic Risk Board pushed for a ban on “multi-issuance” stablecoins that are issued jointly inside and outside the EU, arguing they create cross-border reserve risks. Under the model, EU-licensed issuers would need to hold reserves in the bloc while identical tokens are backed overseas by non-EU partners. Regulators warn that in a downturn redemptions in the EU could overwhelm local reserves and expose the bloc to liabilities from abroad, putting pressure on EU lawmakers to act.
Who does this affect?
Big U.S.-based issuers like Circle and Paxos are the most exposed because they use multi-issuance models and hold reserves largely in dollar cash and short-term U.S. Treasuries. European regulators, banks, payment firms and investors would also be affected as access to dollar-pegged stablecoins could be limited and new euro-backed projects gain traction. The move also touches MiCA’s credibility and the ECB’s digital-euro plans, since it shifts the balance toward euro-based alternatives and bank-led stablecoins.
Why does this matter?
Market-wise, the proposal could fragment stablecoin liquidity, raise costs for cross-border settlement and push trading volumes away from EU venues, at least short term. It will likely accelerate the rollout of euro-backed stablecoins and a digital euro, changing market share away from dollar-dominated tokens and nudging payment flows toward Europe-based solutions. In the near term, the news may increase regulatory uncertainty and volatility for crypto markets, spooking some investors and prompting issuers to rethink their structures.