Bank of America’s recent “On Chain” report has highlighted stablecoins as a transformative force with the potential to reshape the global financial system. As policy initiatives such as the GENIUS Act advance, the bank identifies four major sectors poised to benefit significantly from wider stablecoin adoption.
1. Ethereum: The Powering Layer
Ethereum’s programmable contract capabilities make it the primary infrastructure for stablecoins. With over half of current stablecoins issued on its network, Ethereum benefits directly from increased transaction volumes and rising developer activity. Every stablecoin-issued transaction boosts gas fees, meaning brighter prospects for Ethereum’s revenue streams.
2. Traditional Banks Broadening Digital Services
Institutions like JPMorgan and BNY Mellon are already moving to position themselves in the stablecoin ecosystem. JPMorgan’s JPMD and BNY’s partnership with Ripple are early indicators that the incumbents see tokenized deposits and asset-backed tokens as natural extensions of their offerings. Bank of America notes this represents not just participation but strategic integration.
3. Major Payment Networks
Visa, Mastercard, and PayPal have been quietly building stablecoin capabilities over several years. Visa began stablecoin pilot settlements with USDC in 2020, Mastercard expanded blockchain partnerships, and PayPal launched the PayPal USD stablecoin in 2023. As regulatory clarity arrives, these channels may see major stablecoin volume ramp-ups—especially in payments corridors.
4. E-commerce and Cross-Border Trade
Shopify’s adoption of USDC highlights a growing interest from e-commerce platforms in seamless global payments. Bank of America anticipates stablecoins facilitating near-instantaneous, low-cost transactions across borders—a key catalyst for small and medium merchants seeking friction-free payments.
Macroeconomic Impact on Treasury Markets
Stablecoin issuances backed by U.S. Treasuries are already influencing bond markets. With over $200 billion allocated to short-dated treasuries and repos, issuers like Tether and Circle are exerting measurable downward pressure on Treasury yields. This trend could reshape liquidity dynamics and fund flows in the fixed-income arena as stablecoin cash reserves migrate from conventional bank deposits into T-bills.
Regulation and the Road Ahead
Policymakers are moving forward. The Senate-backed GENIUS Act aims to create a formal regulatory framework for stablecoins, while the Clarity Act and Anti-CBDC provisions seek to clarify digital asset classification and guard against central bank digital currency encroachment. Bank of America suggests a full rollout of stablecoin infrastructure may require three to five years, aligning with major legislative progress.
Why It Matters for Crypto and Beyond
Stablecoins act as a bridge between crypto’s on-chain world and traditional finance. As banks, payment networks, online merchants, and bond markets grow more intertwined with this digital currency infrastructure, the tokenized economy stands to benefit. For crypto, it means greater utility, more transaction volume, and accelerated integration with real-world systems.
Final Takeaway
Bank of America’s analysis paints a picture: stablecoins will do more than augment crypto—they will underpin a broader transformation in digital payments, finance, and institutional adoption. If stablecoin regulation progresses in line with legislative momentum, the next three years could mark a critical shift where stablecoins evolve from niche instruments to financial cornerstones.