Key Takeaways:
French Finance Minister Roland Lescure issued a stark warning on Friday, labeling the current scarcity of euro-pegged stablecoins “not satisfactory” and calling on the bloc’s banking sector to aggressively pursue tokenized assets to preserve European financial sovereignty.
According to Reuters, Lescure issued the warning via pre-recorded comments at a Paris crypto conference, remarks which underscore a growing anxiety within the Élysée and Brussels that the future of digital commerce is being written almost exclusively in U.S. dollars.
The scale of U.S. dominance is difficult to overstate. Tether, the El Salvador-based stablecoin issuer, currently boasts a circulation exceeding $185 billion for its dollar-pegged tokens. Meanwhile, European efforts are struggling to gain traction; Societe Generale’s flagship euro- stablecoin, launched three years ago, has stalled at just 107 million euros ($126 million).
To bridge this gap, a heavyweight consortium including ING, Unicredit, and BNP Paribas has formed a new venture to launch a competitive euro-pegged stablecoin in late 2026.
“That is what we need and that is what we want,” Lescure said on Friday, April 17, referring to the collaboration. “I also strongly encourage banks to further explore the launch of tokenised deposits.”
Lescure’s agenda extends into the core of traditional banking, urging lenders to move beyond stablecoins into tokenized deposits. By converting traditional bank holdings into blockchain-based tokens, officials hope to modernize European “rails” and reduce the continent’s reliance on foreign payment giants.
This push is increasingly viewed through a geopolitical lens. Tense relations with Washington have accelerated the EU’s drive for “strategic autonomy,” with policymakers fearing that a reliance on U.S. payment infrastructure leaves the Eurozone vulnerable to external policy shifts or service fragmentations.
The Minister also addressed the friction between private banking interests and the European Central Bank’s (ECB) digital euro project. While some bank lobbies have resisted the ECB’s digital currency—fearing it could drain traditional deposits—Lescure backed the central bank’s vision.
He described the ECB’s plan to position a digital central bank currency as the “anchor” for tokenization efforts as “the right balance,” suggesting a hybrid ecosystem where public and private digital money work in tandem.
Despite the political urgency, the market remains skeptical. Data from RBC Capital Markets suggests that 66% of European banks still report limited demand for stablecoins from their customers.
However, following U.S. President Donald Trump’s signing of landmark stablecoin legislation last year, European officials believe the window to act is closing. For Lescure, the mission is no longer just about financial innovation—it is about ensuring the euro remains a relevant currency in the era of autonomous digital trade.
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