Эрик Трамп: Стейблкоины как ключ к укреплению доллара США Eric Trump: Stablecoins as the Key to Strengthening the US Dollar

Stablecoins could «rescue the U.S. dollar,» thereby bolstering the value of the national currency. This perspective was shared by Eric Trump, the son of the current president, as noted in a report by news sources.

The crypto entrepreneur specifically highlighted USD1 — a «stablecoin» developed by the DeFi project World Liberty Financial, owned by the Trump family.

As far back as February, Federal Reserve Council member Christopher Waller acknowledged that regulated stablecoins could «broaden the influence of the dollar worldwide» and reinforce its position as a reserve currency.

In April, Brian Pellegrino, founder and CEO of LayerZero Labs, stated that «stablecoins» are the most effective tool for the U.S. government to maintain the dollar’s dominance in global financial markets.

Kyle Clemmer, co-founder of Blockstreet, believes that by the end of Donald Trump’s second term in 2028, USD1 will dominate the market, surpassing both USDT and USDC in capitalization.

Meanwhile, analysts from Citigroup raised their market forecast for «stablecoins» by 2030, estimating it will reach $1.9 trillion in a baseline scenario and $4 trillion in a bullish scenario.

In contrast, JPMorgan considers these estimates overly optimistic, expecting market capitalization of $500 billion by 2028.

Citigroup also pointed out that corporations are leaning towards tokenized assets, where transaction volumes may exceed those of stablecoins by 2030.

The UK Finance group launched an industry pilot project to conduct the first real transactions with tokenized deposits in the United Kingdom. The initiative is set to run until mid-2026 and includes participants such as Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds Banking Group, NatWest, Nationwide, and Santander.

The project’s goals include offering tokenized deposits and programmable payments across three different use cases.

It is worth noting that the anticipated surge in stablecoin launches in the U.S. may turn into a zero-sum competition, as analysts at JPMorgan suggest.