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The following is a guest post and an opinion from Patrick Heusser, a lending and traditional leader at Sentor.
Capital undergoes structural redistribution. What once sat safely in Fractional-Reserve Bank bank accounts is now more and more flowing into fully funded financial systems based on blockchain. From the stablecoins as USDC and USDT For tokenized T-apparatus, institutional and retail capital, it is persecuted by programmability, global interoperability and perceived safety. It is not a simple migration of money; It is a report of financial infrastructure. In this deep dive, we examine the risks, mechanics and strategic reactions to this shift – and ask if a hybrid system may occur before system cracks appear.
In traditional banking, Komerční banka operates on fractional reserves. Deposits are only partially supported and banks create money through loans. This model offers high capital efficiency and elasticity; Banks can support economic growth by expanding the loan, but at the cost of fragility, disagreement of maturity and system dependence on central banks.
Payments (ACH, SEPA, CARD NETWORKS) rely on mesh, credit lines and delay of settlement. Liquidity is controlled in a network of intermediaries and bays.
Stablecoins, on the other hand, work on the basis of Indian reserves. The transactions immediately, transparently settle and are irreversible. However, they require preliminary financing and deliberately eliminate endogenous credit creation. Liquidity must be fully available before transactions. This rigidity offers minimization of confidence and atomicity, but also introduces capital intensity and operational burden when connected with Tradf.
The concept of “singleness of Money” is questioned by this abyss: Stablecoins cannot smoothly replace fractional bank deposits unless deep interoperability and synchronized settlements are determined.
The growing share of global liquidity migrates to stablecoins. This movement represents more than technological preference – it is a shift in monetary architecture. As Marvin Barth articulates, it could effectively implement the modern version of the Chicago plan, divide banks and replace the deposit money with alternatives full of regulation.
Capital Transition from bank accounts to Stablecoins reduces the banking sector’s access to cheap financing, increases the competition of deposit and may require credit contraction. The aggregate, this migration locks capital into tools that, even if liquids are, are not economically used.
Consequences of ripple for banking: As Stablecoin issuers invest in T-Bills and Repos, push other credit users, distort short-term financing markets and increase system liquidity needs.
Stablecoins Promise Promise Real-Time Settlement and Global Reach, yet their fully dedicated design introduces friction that a loan-based banking system never had to face. Since stablecoin cannot borrow in its own balance sheet, any return must come from the express risk elsewhere – risk that large institutions will only carry if they are sufficient compensation, clarity and infrastructure.
JPMorgan sensed these pressures and triggered tokenized deposits-programmable demands on the strings on the bank’s own obligations, which still sit inside the fractional control frame, a regulated frame. By this movement, the bank focuses on
It is basically a defensive game: bring money to store on a chain before stablecoins sip. Architecture is technically elegant, but not without compromises. Users can assume atomic, irrevocable settlement, but the basic asset remains embedded in the credit system, which is subject to the transformation of maturity and regulatory intervention-no visibility, which contrasts sharply with the transparent ethos of non-functional stablecoins.
Concepts, such as the above -mentioned JPMORGAN, raise an interesting question. Can we avoid binary selection between rigid, fully funded systems and elastic banks generating loans? The emerging solutions indicate that we can:
The aim of these hybrid models is to balance capital efficiency with transparency and programmability. They are not friction but are functional.
The money itself shatters into several forms on the chain and off-rare, but the group of deployable capital is final. The competition between fractional banking and nephraction stablecoins is therefore a struggle for who goes, settles and earns the range of digital dollars. Leave uncontrolled, the shift could disrupt the creation of credit and liquidity buffer that supports traditional finances. Leading well, promises safer, faster and more programmable financial reservoir.
The landscape consolidates around players who can cross both worlds of money:
The real winners will be those who can translate the capital intensity between two currency transition systems and reduce the capital intensity of their bridge.