Turkish lira-pegged stablecoins most widely used after dollar tokens, Zodia says


FILE PHOTO: A money changer holds Turkish lira and U.S. dollar banknotes at a currency exchange office in Ankara, Turkey December 16, 2021. REUTERS/Cagla Gurdogan/File Photo

PARIS, June 2 (Reuters) - ⁠Stablecoins pegged to the Turkish lira were the second-most widely used ⁠stablecoins among clients at Standard Chartered's crypto subsidiary last year, although ‌volumes remain small compared to dollar-pegged tokens, Zodia Markets said on Tuesday.

Stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency pegged to fiat currency, have surged in volume in recent years but are mostly used ​in crypto trading and not widely accepted as ⁠a means of payment.

"Our second-largest ⁠currency in terms of stablecoins last year was not the euro or any ⁠G10 ‌currency as one perhaps would’ve expected but rather the Turkish lira," Nick Philpott, co-founder and interim CEO of Zodia Markets, which is majority-owned ⁠by Standard Chartered, said at a press event.

His comments ​highlight the lack of ‌demand for euro-pegged stablecoins, which a group of European banks plan ⁠to launch this ​year despite European Central Bank scepticism.

There is more likely to be future demand for stablecoins in countries where the local financial infrastructure is weaker, or more people are ⁠cut off from the financial system, Standard ​Chartered's crypto analyst Geoff Kendrick said.

A lira-pegged stablecoin was used by clients as an alternative to sending lira via correspondent banking to Zodia's bank account, Philpott said.

"The ⁠TRY stablecoins were simply faster to settle, far more reliable to settle, cheaper to settle, and we would liquidate them more or less immediately on receipt, or certainly each day," he added.

In 2025, Zodia handled $110.5 billion of dollar-pegged stablecoin ​transactions, $3.4 billion worth of lira-pegged ones, and just ⁠tens of millions in euro-pegged stablecoins.

The stablecoin market is dominatedby El Salvador-based Tether and ​U.S. company Circle, which say they have $188 billion ‌and $76 billion of their dollar-pegged tokens in ​circulation, respectively.

A Bank of England policymaker said on Sunday that demand for stablecoins may fade.

(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)

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