At Stable Summit IV in Cannes (27–28 March), leaders came together to examine the future of stablecoins. The panelists included Immo Garlichs (Product Manager, Digital Assets & Currencies) at Deutsche Bank AG, Ivan Fartunov (Co-Founder) of Generic Money, Tony McLaughlin (CEO) of Ubyx, and Ernesto Olmedo Pereira(Head of Strategy & DeFi) at Qivalis, alongside Redwan Meslem from the Enterprise Ethereum Alliance.
The panel, moderated by Redwan Meslem (EEA), explored the operational, technical, and regulatory factors that determine whether stablecoins can move beyond fragmented issuance to become truly global, interoperable instruments. Discussions focused on cross-platform distribution, real-world payment integration, and the infrastructure and standards needed for scalable adoption.
Below is a structured summary of the key insights.
1. Fragmentation Persists Across Platforms
The panel first identified market fragmentation as a key challenge. Stablecoins are issued and traded across various exchanges, banks, and payment providers, resulting in silos that hinder seamless use.
Immo Garlichs noted that, even where stablecoins are available, integration with banking systems and payment processors remains inconsistent. This inconsistency prevents institutions from deploying stablecoins at scale in real-world transactions.
The panel observed that fragmentation is not only technical but also operational and regulatory, affecting settlement, custody, and compliance requirements across regions.
2. Cross-Platform Design is Critical
Ernesto Olmedo Pereira emphasized that stablecoin design directly affects usability. Interoperability standards, cross-chain messaging, and payment API compatibility are essential for institutions to move assets efficiently.
Tokens with these features reduce friction for financial institutions while maintaining compliance and security, which are essential for enterprise adoption.
3. Integrating Stablecoins into Real-World Payments
Panelists agreed that integration with real-world payment systems is the ultimate test. Institutional adoption depends on stablecoins operating alongside existing infrastructure such as SWIFT, ACH, and card networks.
Tony McLaughlin noted that enterprises prioritize operational fit; such as speed, reliability, settlement finality, and regulatory alignment—over the underlying technology.
Stablecoins that do not integrate seamlessly with existing processes face adoption barriers, regardless of technical sophistication.
4. Infrastructure Must Evolve for Scale
Achieving widespread adoption requires more mature distribution infrastructure, including improved custody solutions, standardized APIs, liquidity management, and interoperability protocols.
Ivan Fartunov stated that institutions seek plug-and-play solutions that maintain risk management and compliance standards. Without coordinated infrastructure, stablecoins may remain fragmented tools rather than widely usable forms of money.
The panel emphasized that scalable adoption depends on both technological interoperability and institutional coordination.
5. Regulatory Clarity Drives Adoption
Panelists consistently emphasized that regulatory certainty is essential. Institutions require clear guidance on compliance, anti-money-laundering requirements, and cross-border operations.
Redwan Meslem highlighted EEA’s role as a neutral convening layer, connecting regulators, issuers, and institutional actors to accelerate understanding and adoption.
Clear regulatory frameworks reduce operational risk and build enterprise confidence, which is critical for widespread adoption.
6. Stablecoins Are Pulling Institutions Forward
The panel agreed that market demand is increasingly driving enterprise adoption of stablecoins, rather than adoption being led solely by technology providers.
Ernesto Olmedo Pereira cited use cases such as cross-border settlements and multi-chain payments, where stablecoins improve efficiency and reduce costs. Institutions are responding to market trends, bridging traditional finance and tokenized money.
7. A Path Toward Global Usage
In conclusion, the panel highlighted a pragmatic roadmap for stablecoins:
- Address fragmentation through cross-platform standards.
- Ensure design aligns with institutional requirements.
- Integrate with real-world payment rails.
- Build scalable infrastructure.
- Maintain regulatory clarity.
By focusing on these elements, stablecoins can move beyond isolated issuance and become truly global, interoperable instruments that support enterprise needs while maintaining compliance and operational integrity.
Stable Summit IV
Cannes · 27–28 March
