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Vladimir Tarantaev, CFA, PMP
Vladimir Tarantaev, a CFA expert in fixed income, has a strong track record in credit analysis at CIS banks and a diverse background in math-physics and astronomy.
Vladimir Tarantaev
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29.10.2025
Ten Major Banks Unite to Create a Multi-Currency Stablecoin
Ten Major Banks Unite to Create a Multi-Currency Stablecoin
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Ten of the world’s largest banks are stepping into the digital-money era with plans to create their own stablecoin tied to major global currencies. Beyond the buzzwords, this could be a practical step toward faster bond settlements, instant payments, and new investment tools. Is this the moment when digital finance finally goes institutional?

Two weeks ago, a group of ten of the world’s biggest banks - including Bank of America, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, UBS, Citi, Barclays, BNP Paribas, and Santander - announced plans to explore launching a jointly issued stablecoin pegged to major G7 currencies.

The project aims to test whether digital assets backed by real-world money can make financial transactions faster, cheaper, and more transparent, while staying fully compliant with regulations. The proposed asset would be reserve-backed (i.e., fiat or equivalent) and placed on public blockchains.

In plain terms, a stablecoin is a digital token that tracks a traditional currency 1-for-1. It’s money that can move almost instantly on a blockchain, even outside of banking hours. If these global banks succeed, their token could become one of the first “institutional-grade” stablecoins - a digital dollar or euro issued not by a fintech start-up, but by the very banks that currently run the world’s payments system.

A bank-backed stablecoin could become the foundation for faster settlement of bond trades and digital bond issuance. For retail investors, it could eventually translate into easier access to tokenised bond products and 24/7 cross-border payments from their usual banking apps.

Of course, big questions remain: how will regulators treat this new form of digital money? Will it compete with central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) or complement them? These answers will take time, but the direction is clear. Traditional finance is no longer just watching the digital-asset revolution; it’s preparing to become part of it. And for bond investors, that could mean the arrival of a new, more efficient market infrastructure that changes how capital truly flows.

Author
Vladimir Tarantaev, CFA, PMP
Vladimir Tarantaev, a CFA expert in fixed income, has a strong track record in credit analysis at CIS banks and a diverse background in math-physics and astronomy.
Vladimir Tarantaev
This article does not constitute investment advice or personal recommendation. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Bondfish does not recommend using the data and information provided as the only basis for making any investment decision. You should not make any investment decisions without first conducting your own research and considering your own financial situation.
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