Charles Schwab wants to issue his own stubcoin, CEO Rick Worster tells analysts on Friday’s revenue call, adding the company to the ever-growing list of traditional financial giants exploring tokens as the US prepares enshrine stablecoin Regulation to the law.
“Stable Coin is likely to play a role in trading on the blockchain, and that’s what we can offer,” Wurster said.
There have been comments from executives that Schwab will offer dollar-covered tokens as it aims to deepen its foray into crypto. The team is preparing to start trading spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs for their clients, according to the phone. The brokerage giant, which manages assets of more than $7 trillion, is cautious about adding crypto investment options to its services.
The Westlake, Texas-based company is the latest large financial services company that has expressed interest in entering the $250 billion-plus stubcoin market. Citigroup has announced similar plans Earlier this week, on a post-revenue call with an analyst. JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon also revealed on Tuesday Development of Stablecoin Despite his reservations about the usefulness of the token, it is the best mind for his financial services company.
Schwab’s consideration is as the US is poised to adopt the Fiat Page’s digital currency regulatory framework, which can significantly increase adoption.
US President Donald Trump will sign on Friday the Genius Act, a market structure bill focused on the stable office.
The Stablecoin market is projected to grow to around $750 billion by 2030, according to recent forecasts from Geoffrey Kendrick, global head of digital asset research at UK-based Bank Standard.
Crypto companies now dominate emerging markets. Tether is the largest stubcoin issuer and will process $179.3 billion in transactions over the past 24 hours. data Provider COINMARKETCAP. US-based circles are the closest competitors, with $28.2 billion in transactions being processed over the same period, CoinmarketCap data shows.
Schwab was trading at $94.86 on Friday afternoon, up nearly 2%.