The president of the European Central Bank, Christine Lagarde, delivered a harsh verdict on private stablecoins, calling them an ineffective instrument for the future of the euro during a forum in Roda de Berà.
While global markets were expecting signals from Europe’s top officials about a softer approach toward digital assets, Lagarde chose the path of strict sovereignty, labeling stablecoins as a “private trap” that threatens the stability of the entire European economy.
Lagarde acknowledged that stablecoins became the dominant settlement layer in DeFi only because they solved the volatility problem of cryptocurrencies. But for the international role of the euro, that is not enough.
Why the ECB is rejecting the US stablecoin model
The main risk is the transformation of stablecoins into yield-bearing assets. If token holders begin receiving income indirectly tied to U.S. government bonds, as is happening with Tether and Circle, this would create uncontrolled capital flows that the ECB would not be able to influence.
The president of the ECB also did not miss the opportunity to remind everyone of the fragility of the system, recalling the events three years ago when USDC lost its dollar peg due to the collapse of SVB, which still serves as the ECB’s main argument against stablecoins. Stablecoins are private liabilities, and therefore the risk of a “bank run” is built into them by default, the ECB president believes.
For the European economy, which is built on bank lending rather than capital markets, as in the U.S., such a risk is considered unacceptable.
Instead of handing the market over to private players, the ECB is building its own “backend” for digital finance, and there are two key points in this direction:
The ECB’s angle is highly pragmatic. On one hand, Lagarde praises DLT for instant settlement and the removal of intermediaries, while on the other, she insists that the “settlement asset” must remain the euro under regulatory control.
European officials do not want to import what they consider systemic instability, even if the price for that is temporarily lagging behind the scale of the “digital” euro compared to dollar-backed stablecoins. That is perhaps the key takeaway from Christine Lagarde’s speech.






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