New Taiwan Dollar Stablecoin to Launch in 2026! Financial Experts Warn of Currency Sovereignty Defense Battle

Taiwan FinTech Association Director Wen Hongjun warns that USD stablecoins USDT and USDC occupy approximately 99% of the global market share. If Taiwan does not quickly issue its own New Taiwan Dollar stablecoin, it may become marginalized in emerging digital financial infrastructure. This is not just a payment issue but a competition over monetary sovereignty and control of financial ledgers. The Financial Supervisory Commission states that if virtual asset legislation and related regulations are passed promptly, Taiwan’s issued stablecoin could be launched as early as the second half of 2026.

USD Stablecoins’ Monopoly and the 99% Currency Sovereignty Crisis

美元穩定幣壟斷市場

(Source: CoinMarketCap)

2025 is widely regarded as the “Year of Stablecoins.” Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies designed to maintain stable value, typically pegged 1:1 to fiat currencies, and are widely used as settlement currencies for digital assets and tokenized real-world assets (RWA). Because USD-pegged stablecoins like USDT and USDC currently account for about 99% of the global market share, this near-monopoly raises deep concerns over monetary sovereignty.

Wen Hongjun told Central News Agency in an interview on Friday that this issue is not just about payment convenience but also a competition over monetary sovereignty and control of financial ledgers. When global digital financial settlements are built on USD stablecoins, the monetary sovereignty of other countries is effectively weakened. For an economy like Taiwan, deeply integrated into global supply chains, financial settlements are long locked into the USD stablecoin system. Taiwanese manufacturers and exchanges have long used large volumes of USDT and USDC, but all settlement logic is centered on the US dollar.

Wen Hongjun emphasizes that a New Taiwan Dollar stablecoin can serve as an exchange medium and accounting unit for RWA transactions, enabling on-chain financial products to be priced in NTD. Without a NTD stablecoin, Taiwan’s financial products may struggle to circulate globally. When Taiwan has a compliant, transparent, and regulated NTD stablecoin, certain segments of the supply chain—such as settlement, financing, and margin—can begin to be priced in NTD, gradually expanding the space for financial autonomy.

As countries develop new accounting systems outside traditional banking ledgers, Japan and South Korea are actively launching their own currencies supporting stablecoins. Wen Hongjun warns that if Taiwan delays, it could miss a strategic opportunity. This is not a theoretical threat but a real ongoing development. When South Korea and Japan’s stablecoins start circulating within regional supply chains, Taiwanese enterprises without a corresponding NTD stablecoin will be forced to continue using USD or other countries’ digital currencies, losing influence in the digital financial era.

10% of Taiwanese Businesses Are Already Using Stablecoins to Meet Real Needs

Data from the Taiwan External Trade Development Council shows that nearly 5% of local Taiwanese companies and over 10% of Taiwanese companies operating overseas are already experimenting with stablecoins for cross-border payments. This figure proves that the demand is real, not hypothetical. Wen Hongjun said that export-oriented tech companies may already be receiving USD stablecoins, and without a NTD stablecoin, converting these funds into local currency could reduce efficiency and weaken competitiveness.

Exchanges like MaiCoin have repeatedly called for Taiwan to issue its own NTD stablecoin, citing the need for a truly digital, programmable NTD tool for corporate fund management and international competitiveness. Industry players focusing on cross-border supply chains and payment services, such as XREX, also emphasize that Taiwan must maintain a key financial role within the global supply chain by having an internationally interoperable NTD stablecoin—rather than forever being a passenger in the USD-centric US dollar universe.

The most tangible scenario for the general public is cross-border remittances and remittances by overseas workers. Foreign workers transferring wages home, or Taiwanese businesses managing funds across Southeast Asia, mostly still rely on SWIFT, with reconciliation often taking several days. Industry demonstrations have shown that if cross-border settlement between banks is handled with stablecoins, the process can be shortened from several days to minutes, and remittance costs could be significantly reduced. For the new generation accustomed to mobile payments, such an experience will soon become a basic requirement.

From an industry innovation perspective, the Web3 ecosystem has already demonstrated that decentralized finance, NFTs, on-chain gaming, and asset tokenization all require a relatively stable digital token as a settlement unit. Currently, this role is almost monopolized by USDT and USDC. If compliant NTD stablecoins are introduced in the future, Taiwanese startups and projects can design business models based on NTD logic, avoiding the need to circle through USD and then back. This is not just a currency exchange risk but also a matter of mindset and discourse power.

Implementation Path and Dual-Track System in 2026

The Chair of the Financial Supervisory Commission, Peng Jinlong, recently stated that if virtual asset legislation and related regulations are passed quickly, Taiwan’s issued stablecoin could be launched as early as the second half of 2026. The Virtual Asset Service Law planned by the Executive Yuan draws heavily from the EU’s MiCA regulation, aiming to bring crypto assets and stablecoins into a comprehensive regulatory framework. The FSC pointed out a timetable during a legislative inquiry, stating that if the special law is successfully passed with three readings in this legislative session, and subordinate regulations are established within half a year, Taiwan’s version of a stablecoin could be operational around June or July 2026.

Three Key Implementation Points for the NTD Stablecoin

Reserves and Trust Mechanism: Backed by 100% or near-100% secure reserves, primarily held in regulated banks and trust accounts.

KYC and Anti-Money Laundering: Managed by licensed virtual asset service providers, integrating customer verification into existing systems.

Bank Interoperability Design: The NTD stablecoin must allow real-time, low-cost 1:1 conversions between bank accounts and wallets.

From a monetary system architecture perspective, the NTD stablecoin and CBDC can form a dual-track system—public and private. The CBDC issued by the central bank is closer to digital cash, managed directly by the central bank, and can be used in public payments, government subsidies, and social welfare distribution. Privately issued stablecoins are more akin to tokenized deposits or electronic money, designed by banks or payment institutions within a regulatory framework. The two are not mutually exclusive but serve different roles.

Wen Hongjun suggests that Taiwan could leverage its semiconductor advantages to issue a dedicated USD stablecoin, reducing global transaction costs, while also using a NTD stablecoin within Taiwan’s semiconductor and AI supply chains for payments. This dual-coin strategy would enable participation in international markets while maintaining control over the domestic currency’s sovereignty. Taiwan has played a key role in the semiconductor supply chain; whether it can maintain similar importance in digital finance and Web3 supply chains will largely depend on how the NTD stablecoin is designed today.

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