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French finance minister calls for more euro-pegged stablecoins

By Thomson Reuters Apr 17, 2026 | 3:33 AM

By Elizabeth Howcroft

PARIS, April 17 (Reuters) – Europe needs more euro-based stablecoins, French Finance Minister Roland Lescure said on Friday, and urged the bloc’s banks to explore tokenised deposits to help end U.S. dominance in ​digital payments.

In pre-recorded comments at a crypto conference in Paris, Lescure ‌said the relatively small volume of euro-pegged stablecoins compared to dollar-pegged ones was “not satisfactory”.

Banks worldwide are experimenting with stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency designed to maintain a constant value and backed by traditional currencies. Several have joined forces to trial the technology, especially since U.S. President ‌Donald Trump ​last year signed a law establishing rules for ⁠stablecoins.

However, the stablecoin market is ⁠dominated by El Salvador-based Tether, and the coins are used mostly for crypto trading, with their role in making payments still minimal. Two-thirds of European banks surveyed by RBC Capital Markets said demand for stablecoins remains limited, ​according to a research note published this week.

EUROPEAN BANKS SEEK TO WEAKEN U.S. DOMINANCE

A group of European banks, including ING, UniCredit and BNP Paribas have formed ⁠a company to launch a euro-pegged stablecoin ⁠in the second half of 2026 that they hope will counter ​U.S. dominance in digital payments.

“That is what we need and that is what we ​want,” Lescure said on Friday, referring to the initiative. “I also strongly ‌encourage banks to further explore the launch of tokenised deposits,” he added. Tokenisation refers to creating blockchain-based tokens to stand in for existing financial assets.

European policymakers are trying to reduce reliance on non‑European payment providers, as a result of tense ⁠relations with the U.S. that have heightened concerns about the fragmentation of EU payments services.

The European Central Bank has been developing a digital euro to preserve the role ⁠of central bank money ‌in a digital economy, although in some countries bank lobbies ⁠have resisted the plans and progress in European Parliament has ​been slow.

Lescure ‌on Friday said he supported ECB plans to put ​a digital central ⁠bank currency at the centre of tokenisation efforts, calling it “the right balance”.

Tether says it has more than $185 billion of its dollar-pegged tokens in circulation. Societe Generale says its euro-pegged stablecoin, launched in 2023, has just 107 million euros ($126 million) in circulation.

($1 = 0.8479 euros)

(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft, writing by Alessandro Parodi, Editing by Tommy Reggiori ​Wilkes and Barbara Lewis)