For years, stablecoins have been dominated by two names: Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USDC. They’ve been the backbone of crypto trading, DeFi, and cross-border payments. But that cozy duopoly is about to face serious competition from an unexpected direction.
Banks. Actual banks. And big tech companies too.
At Consensus Miami 2026 on Thursday, Anchorage Digital CEO Nathan McCauley dropped a number that should make everyone in crypto pay attention. Up to 20 financial institutions and large tech companies are currently queued up to issue their own stablecoins through Anchorage, America’s first federally chartered crypto bank.
“Since the GENIUS Act passed, Anchorage has won every single large stablecoin issuance mandate across the landscape,” McCauley said.
That’s not a prediction about what might happen someday. That’s a pipeline of real institutions getting ready to launch their own digital dollars.
What Changed? The GENIUS Act
To understand why banks are suddenly rushing into stablecoins, you need to understand the GENIUS Act.
The Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act passed last year, creating the first comprehensive federal framework for stablecoin issuance in the United States. Before the GENIUS Act, the regulatory picture was a mess. There was no clear legal structure for who could issue stablecoins, how reserves should be managed, or what reporting requirements applied.
That uncertainty kept most traditional financial institutions on the sidelines. Banks don’t launch products without regulatory clarity. They just don’t.
The GENIUS Act changed that overnight. It gave federal regulators clear authority over payment stablecoins, established rules around reserves and redemption, and created a pathway for federally chartered banks to issue stablecoins with unlimited issuance capability.
For a company like Anchorage, which has been federally regulated by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency for over four years, the timing couldn’t be better. While new entrants would need to build compliance infrastructure from scratch, Anchorage already has it.
Who’s in the Queue?
McCauley didn’t name specific companies, but he described the types of institutions knocking on Anchorage’s door. Some are traditional banks looking to offer stablecoin-based services to their existing customers. Others are stablecoin issuers who already have distribution channels and just need a compliant way to mint and manage their tokens.
We already know about a few. Western Union is preparing to launch its USDPT stablecoin on Solana, with Anchorage handling the issuance. That launch could happen as early as this month, with the first phase focusing on settlement between Western Union and its agent network in select corridors.
Ethena Labs is another confirmed partner, working with Anchorage on what they’ve described as the first GENIUS Act-compliant stablecoin issuance. And last month, Anchorage partnered with M0, a protocol that lets institutions mint fully customizable stablecoins. M0 already works with Stripe, MoonPay, and MetaMask.
The picture that’s emerging is one where stablecoins stop being a crypto-native phenomenon and become a standard product that banks and payment companies offer alongside checking accounts and credit cards.
Why Would a Bank Want Its Own Stablecoin?
If USDC and USDT already work perfectly well, why would a bank bother creating its own?
The answer comes down to control, revenue, and customer relationships. When a bank issues its own stablecoin, it controls the reserves (and earns yield on them), it controls the user experience, and it keeps the customer relationship inside its own ecosystem. Using someone else’s stablecoin means handing those advantages to Circle or Tether.
There’s also a competitive angle. Cross-border payments are a massive revenue source for banks, and the current system is slow, expensive, and opaque. A bank that can offer instant, low-cost stablecoin transfers has a serious advantage over one that’s still running three-day wire transfers through correspondent banking networks.
For tech companies, the motivation is similar but focused on their platforms. Imagine a social media company or e-commerce platform that issues its own stablecoin for in-app purchases, creator payments, or merchant settlements. The stablecoin becomes a tool for keeping users and money inside the ecosystem.
What This Means for USDC and USDT
The obvious question is whether a wave of bank-issued stablecoins threatens the dominance of USDC and Tether. The short answer is: probably not in the near term, but the landscape is definitely shifting.
USDC and USDT have massive network effects. They’re integrated into every major exchange, DeFi protocol, and payment platform. A new bank-issued stablecoin would need to build that kind of distribution from scratch, which takes years.
But over time, a world with dozens of regulated, bank-backed stablecoins could fragment the market in interesting ways. Some stablecoins might dominate specific corridors (like Western Union’s USDPT for remittances). Others might live entirely within a bank’s existing ecosystem. And the big universal stablecoins like USDC would continue to serve as the neutral, widely accepted option.
The real winner in all of this? The US dollar. Every single one of these stablecoins is pegged to the dollar, which means every new issuance extends the greenback’s reach deeper into the digital economy.
The Bigger Picture
McCauley made one comment at Consensus that stuck with everyone in the room. He said that the replatforming of money itself through stablecoins and digital assets is “vastly underestimated” even by the people at a crypto conference who think about this stuff every day.
He might be right. When you combine 20 institutions lining up to issue regulated stablecoins with Amazon building stablecoin payment rails for AI agents and Visa settling credit cards in USDC, you start to see a picture where stablecoins aren’t just a crypto thing anymore. They’re becoming the plumbing of a new financial system.
And the companies that build that plumbing, whether they’re crypto-native firms like Anchorage or traditional giants like JPMorgan and Western Union, are positioning themselves to capture enormous value as the transition accelerates.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.

















