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

By Thomson Reuters Jun 2, 2026 | 10:18 AM

By Elizabeth Howcroft

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 dominated by 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)