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Bank of England’s Bailey sees ‘wrestle’ with US on stablecoin regulation

By Thomson Reuters May 8, 2026 | 9:37 AM

By David Milliken

LONDON, May 8 (Reuters) – Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said on Friday he expected there to be a “wrestle” between the United ​States and international regulators on the treatment of ‌stablecoins, a form of cryptocurrency he sees as a potential threat to financial stability.

Stablecoins are typically pegged at a fixed rate to the U.S. dollar or another major currency, and aim to ‌be ​an alternative to the existing banking ⁠system for making domestic ⁠or international payments.

The current United States administration under President Donald Trump has been keen to promote stablecoins, which often use U.S. Treasury bills as a backing ​asset.

But Bailey, who chairs the Financial Stability Board, an international body that aims to coordinate regulation, has long ⁠been sceptical about cryptocurrencies and ⁠wary of the potential risks from stablecoins.

“If ​we want stablecoins to be part of the architecture of ​payments globally … they’re only going to work if ‌we have international standards. Frankly, that, I think, is going to be a coming wrestle with the (U.S.) administration,” Bailey said at a conference on financial imbalances hosted by ⁠the BoE.

Bailey said he was concerned some U.S. stablecoins could not be readily turned into dollars without going through a ⁠crypto exchange, potentially ‌limiting their convertibility in a crisis.

But ⁠if stablecoins became widely used for cross-border ​payments, ‌then during a crisis hard-to-convert U.S. stablecoins ​could flow ⁠to jurisdictions such as Britain which intend to have robust obligations for convertibility, he said.

“We know what would happen if there was a run on a stablecoin – they’d all turn up here,” Bailey said.

(Reporting by David Milliken; editing ​by William James)