Stablecoins are moving more money than ever before. However, according to analysts at JPMorgan Chase, the bigger story isn’t just growth—it’s how efficiently that money is moving.
Stablecoin activity is rising quickly as more payments shift toward real-time settlement systems.
JPMorgan Payments research on real-time payments highlights how user expectations are changing as financial infrastructure modernizes:
“Consumers and businesses increasingly expect funds to move as fast as information.”
The same JPMorgan research emphasizes how quickly instant settlement is becoming standard rather than optional:
What this really means:
People don’t want to wait for money anymore—and increasingly, they don’t have to. As payments become instant, stablecoins get reused more often. That higher turnover—what analysts call velocity—means the system can handle more activity without needing a much larger supply.
The total stablecoin market is now worth over $300 billion. That’s impressive—but what’s more striking is how much these assets are being used.
According to the State of Crypto 2025 Report:
The report also notes:
“On an adjusted basis… stablecoins have done $9 trillion in the last 12 months.”
Even if the exact numbers vary, the direction is clear—usage is growing much faster than market size. That gap is exactly what JPMorgan is pointing to.
Here’s a clearer way to understand what’s happening:
| Metric | 2022 | 2024 | 2026 (est.) | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stablecoin Market Cap | ~$150B | ~$250B | $300B+ | Steady growth |
| Annual Transaction Volume | ~$6T | ~$20T | $17T–$46T | Rapid growth |
| Implied Velocity (Volume ÷ Market Cap) | ~40x | ~80x | 60x–150x | Rising fast |
The takeaway:
Stablecoins aren’t just growing—they’re working harder. Each dollar is being used more frequently, which is why transaction volume is pulling away from market cap.
Rules are also starting to catch up with adoption.
The GENIUS Act is one of the first major efforts to create a clear legal framework for stablecoins in the U.S.
The law requires stablecoins to be backed one-to-one by high-quality reserves, such as U.S. dollars or Treasuries.
Why this matters:
When rules become clearer, more businesses and institutions are willing to participate. That doesn’t just increase supply—it increases how often stablecoins are used, which again feeds into higher velocity.
Even with all this growth, the market is still concentrated among a few major players:
| Issuer | Flagship Stablecoin | Est. Market Share | Role in Velocity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tether | USDT | ~65–70% | High trading activity, fast turnover |
| Circle | USDC | ~20–25% | Payments and institutional use |
| Others | Various | ~5–10% | Smaller but growing |
What this tells us:
Not all stablecoins behave the same way. Some are used heavily in trading (high velocity), while others are gaining traction in payments and real-world finance. That mix will shape how the market evolves.
Step back, and a clear pattern emerges:
This points to a bigger shift:
Stablecoins are no longer just digital cash. They are becoming core financial infrastructure.
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