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Just came across something interesting about how stablecoins might reshape Treasury bill markets. Standard Chartered's analysis suggests that if stablecoins hit $2 trillion market cap by end-2028 (currently around $300-320 billion), we could see massive shifts in Treasury bill status and demand.
Here's the math that caught my attention: stablecoin issuers like Tether and Circle would need roughly $1 trillion in fresh T-bill reserves to back that growth. Add in another $1-1.2 trillion from Fed buying, and you're looking at $2.2 trillion in total new Treasury bill demand through 2028. But net new supply is only projected at $1.3 trillion, leaving a potential $900 billion gap.
What makes this really interesting is that the Treasury might have to rethink its issuance strategy. The analysis suggests they could boost T-bill supply by raising its share of total debt issuance by 2.5 percentage points over three years. That would create roughly $900 billion in additional bills—potentially by pausing 30-year auctions and reallocating from longer-dated bonds.
The mechanics are straightforward: as stablecoin reserves grow, issuers park inflows into short-term Treasuries to earn yield while maintaining liquidity. Tether alone holds T-bills rivaling mid-sized sovereign investors. Circle does similar things through money market funds. This crypto-driven capital is effectively funding the front end of the yield curve.
There's a caveat though. Stablecoin growth has actually slowed recently—stuck just above $300 billion after Bitcoin dropped over 50% from its October 2025 peak. Current BTC price around $71K shows that weakness. But Standard Chartered still sees this as cyclical and expects the long-term trajectory to hold, meaning Treasury bill status could become increasingly tied to crypto market cycles.
If this plays out, we're looking at a structural shift where digital asset adoption directly influences U.S. government financing. The Treasury is already monitoring this trend closely, as they noted in their February QRA. Worth watching how policy responds.