The World’s Most Powerful Bank Just Called Stablecoins ‘Fake Money’—Here’s Why Tether Holders Should Be Worried

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The world’s most powerful banking institution just dropped its harshest critique yet of the $260 billion stablecoin market, warning that these “digital dollars” pose existential threats to global monetary systems—even as the U.S. Senate moves to legitimize them.

The Bank for International Settlements—the global institution that serves as a hub for central banks worldwide—issued what amounts to a declaration of war against stablecoins in its annual report released on June 24. Their message was unambiguous: stablecoins “fall short” as sound money and threaten both financial stability and national monetary sovereignty.

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This isn’t just academic handwringing. The BIS represents 63 central banks controlling roughly 95% of global GDP, making their warnings the closest thing to official policy guidance for the world’s financial system.

The timing is particularly striking. The U.S. Senate last week passed legislation creating the first comprehensive regulatory framework for dollar-pegged stablecoins. If the House follows suit, it could trigger an explosion in stablecoin adoption—exactly what the BIS is warning against.

The BIS laid out three core concerns that should worry any investor holding significant stablecoin positions:

1. The “Fake Money” Problem Hyun Song Shin, the BIS’s chief economist, compared modern stablecoins to the chaotic private banking era of 19th-century America, when different banks issued their own notes that traded at varying discounts. Unlike true central bank money, stablecoins lack what he calls “singleness”—the universal acceptance that makes a dollar bill worth exactly one dollar, anywhere, anytime.

2. The Tether Transparency Black Hole The report highlighted disclosure concerns around Tether, which controls over half the stablecoin market but has faced persistent questions about whether it actually holds the assets it claims. “Is the money really there? Where is it?” asked BIS Deputy General Manager Andrea Maechler—a question that should keep any USDT holder awake at night.