As U.S. banking giants move toward launching a unified stablecoin, Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson is taking a quiet victory lap.
The outspoken blockchain pioneer has long warned that traditional financial institutions would eventually co-opt crypto infrastructure—and now, it’s happening.
Following recent reports from The Wall Street Journal, JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and Citigroup are reportedly in talks to create a bank-issued stablecoin, with backing from payment giants like Zelle and The Clearing House. The initiative aims to produce a fully regulated digital asset that could rival established players like Tether and Circle.
Hoskinson responded with a simple “As predicted” on X—three words that echoed loudly across crypto circles.
The move comes at a moment of regulatory clarity, as the GENIUS Act gains traction in the U.S. Senate, offering a framework for stablecoin compliance. With a pro-crypto White House under President Trump and a $243 billion stablecoin market ripe for disruption, the stage is set for banks to finally enter the digital currency arena.
For Hoskinson, this isn’t just validation—it’s a warning. He’s frequently cautioned that unless the crypto space stays decentralized and vigilant, it risks being absorbed by the very institutions it sought to disrupt.
While the banking sector’s embrace of blockchain could drive mainstream adoption, some fear that this shift will come at the expense of decentralization. A bank-backed token may win on trust and liquidity, but it also raises concerns about gatekeeping, censorship, and financial centralization—all issues that early crypto founders, Hoskinson among them, hoped to eliminate.
As the stablecoin wars heat up, Hoskinson’s voice remains a reminder that the future of crypto isn’t just about adoption—it’s about who controls the rails.
The first week of July brought notable advancements in crypto infrastructure, governance, and trading.
Europe’s reluctance to embrace stablecoins and blockchain technology could erode its monetary sovereignty and marginalize the euro in the next phase of global finance, according to former European Central Bank board member Lorenzo Bini Smaghi.
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Bo Hines, the U.S. President’s Chief Advisor on Digital Assets, believes that upcoming stablecoin legislation could catapult the digital asset market to unprecedented heights. In a recent statement,