#稳定币监管与应用 Seeing Coinbase and Forbes' 2026 outlook, what flashes through my mind is a clear timeline— from the ICO frenzy in 2017, the bear market despair in 2018, to the technological awakening during DeFi summer 2020, and now the orderly entry of institutional capital. The topic of stablecoins is especially worth a closer look.



I still remember when Tether first appeared in 2014, the entire market was skeptical about it. Back then, we needed stablecoins like we needed air, but our understanding of their essence was far from mature. Now, Coinbase predicts that by 2028, the total market cap of stablecoins will reach $1.2 trillion. This is not just wishful thinking—applications like cross-border settlement, remittances, and payroll platforms have already been validated on a small scale. Compared to the failed cases of the past (such as BitAssets, NuBits, and other algorithmic stablecoins), we finally understand: the future of stablecoins must be built on real asset backing and a clear regulatory framework.

The statement from Forbes that "market cooling does not hinder industry progress" resonates deeply with me. Every time a bear market arrives, someone proclaims that crypto is dead, but true builders never stop working. During the winter of 2022, many infrastructure and compliance solutions quietly matured amid such doubts. Looking at the evolution of DAT 2.0 now—shifting from asset accumulation to professional trading and tokenization of blockchain space—this is a clear sign of progressing from speculative mindsets to practical value.

If stablecoins are considered the blood of this ecosystem, then the next thing to observe is where this blood flows. The predicted expansion of market trading volume and institutional acceptance of on-chain settlement are validating a hypothesis: crypto is no longer just a fringe casino but is becoming the infrastructure of the digital economy. This time, we are not repeating the bubbles of history but building its skyscraper.
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