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 to “infrastructure risk” (systemic financial stability threatened by network failure). It’s a distinction that changes everything about how policymakers should approach digital asset regulation.
The European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund have separately cautioned that large stablecoins could become systemically important, especially as they deepen connections to traditional finance. A severe price shock, they warn, could trigger runs on stablecoins, forced liquidations of tokenized assets, and contagion effects reaching beyond the blockchain into regulated financial markets. These aren’t speculative what-ifs anymore—they’re scenarios regulators actively model and discuss in policy meetings.
What Regulators Are Saying: Stablecoins, Systemic Risk, and Safeguards
The research stops short of prescribing specific policies, but it outlines the fundamental choice facing regulators worldwide. They could declare public blockchains unsuitable for regulated financial activity because native tokens introduce unacceptable volatility. Alternatively, they could permit their use while imposing safeguards: contingency plans for validator participation, backup settlement arrangements, and minimum standards ensuring adequate economic security during stress periods.
Neither path is straightforward. Restricting Ethereum’s use in finance would eliminate a globally accessible settlement layer but avoid concentration risk. Permitting its use with safeguards would preserve innovation and decentralization but require regulatory frameworks that don’t yet exist. Central banks and financial authorities are grappling with this tension across jurisdictions.
What’s clear is that Ethereum’s token economics can no longer be dismissed as purely internal to the cryptocurrency industry. The tokens that power network security have become a vector for systemic risk that financial regulators must now monitor, model, and potentially manage. As stablecoins and tokenized assets deepen their integration into financial systems, the price action in Ethereum going “into the ether” would ripple far beyond the crypto community—touching traditional finance, payment systems, and everything built atop this increasingly critical infrastructure.