Stablecoins are no longer a niche tool within crypto—they’re rapidly becoming embedded in global commerce.
Recent figures from Artemis show that over $94 billion in stablecoin transactions were processed between early 2023 and February 2025, underscoring their rising influence in digital payments.
Business-to-business (B2B) settlements lead the charge, with an annual pace of $36 billion, while card-based stablecoin spending has surged past $13 billion. The data highlights that dollar-pegged digital currencies are now playing a meaningful role in modern payment rails.
Tether’s USDT is still the go-to stablecoin for users, followed by Circle’s USDC. On the blockchain side, Tron and Ethereum handle the bulk of these transfers, especially for high-value transactions. Notably, average B2B transfers on these two networks exceed $219,000, far outpacing those on other chains.
The stablecoin market cap has soared to $247 billion, according to DeFiLlama, with increasing institutional interest. U.S. lawmakers are working on regulatory frameworks to ensure the dollar remains central in the digital age, while the UAE and EU have already taken the lead with clear legislation.
Traditional finance isn’t sitting on the sidelines either. U.S. banks are reportedly exploring a joint stablecoin project, and fintech giants like Stripe are enabling stablecoin payments in over 100 countries. As adoption spreads, there’s also growing interest in stablecoins not tied to the U.S. dollar, reflecting a more diversified global demand.
XRP has come under intensified selling pressure, sliding nearly 10% over the past week and signaling deeper concerns among derivatives traders.
Coinbase is gearing up to broaden its futures trading capabilities, introducing round-the-clock contracts for Solana (SOL), XRP, and Cardano (ADA) starting June 13.
Investor sentiment around the potential approval of a spot Solana ETF has surged in recent weeks, with new data suggesting growing confidence that 2025 could be the year the green light finally comes.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has made it clear it will no longer involve itself in regulating memecoins—tokens often driven by internet culture, hype, and political branding.