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The term "stablecoin" will become outdated! a16z: Stability is now basic, the next is "programmable money"
a16z’s perspective points out that the term “stablecoin” is becoming outdated. Stability has become a technological baseline, and programmable money is the core innovation. This technology enables real-time settlement, embedded finance, and composability, symbolizing the industry’s move into maturity.
On May 1, a16z crypto published an opinion article written by Robert Hackett, arguing that the term “stablecoin” is rapidly becoming obsolete. Hackett’s core point is: when these assets were first invented, “whether they can maintain a 1:1 peg to the dollar” was the key achievement, so “stability” became the focus of the name; but as of 2026, stability is now a basic threshold, not a selling point. The true value of this technology lies in “programmable money”—capable of instant cross-border settlement, embedded into applications, and composable like software.
Core argument: “Stability” is now the baseline, and innovation is in programmability
Hackett’s key sentence in the article is: “Stability is now a basic threshold (table stakes), a prerequisite, not the focus.” The corresponding observation is: users and institutions, when using assets like USDT, USDC, PYUSD, DAI, no longer ask “Can it maintain a 1:1 peg to the dollar?” That question has already been assumed to be yes. The real question driving usage becomes: “What else can we build with it?”
“Programmable money” manifests concretely in three aspects:
Vocabulary evolution: Four candidates and the “horsepower fate”
Hackett suggests that the future evolution of the term “stablecoin” could go in several directions: “digital cash,” “programmable money,” “digital dollars/euros,” or simply “onchain assets.” But he predicts the ultimate fate might be twofold: either “stablecoin” continues to exist like “horsepower”—but people no longer remember its literal meaning; or it simply disappears, becoming an intangible infrastructure for “how money operates.”
The horsepower analogy is very fitting—the unit was originally a marketing term used by James Watt in the 18th century to translate steam engine performance into “equivalent to a few horses” for buyers’ understanding. Today, humans no longer rely on horses to power machinery, but “horsepower” still appears in car, engine, and motor specifications as a pure technical unit. Stablecoins might follow the same path: once the technology matures and stability as a baseline is no longer worth highlighting, the term “stablecoin” will only be a relic of history.
Implications for the crypto industry: the shift in terminology as technology matures
Hackett’s view is not just wordplay but a signal that the crypto industry is entering a “technology maturity” phase. Tether announced on May 1 a Q1 net profit of $1 billion, with reserves of $8.2 billion; USDT’s financial infrastructure status is now comparable to a systemically important financial institution (SIFI). On April 28, a16z proposed stablecoin-based BaaS (Banking-as-a-Service), treating stablecoins as foundational banking components. This commentary on May 1 elevates the vocabulary implications of this trend.
For crypto entrepreneurs and investors, the practical lessons are threefold:
Vocabulary evolution is often the last mile of technological maturity. When the term “stablecoin” becomes completely outdated, cryptocurrencies may truly enter a stage where “money just works this way” as a normal part of financial infrastructure.