The Rise of Stablecoins: Understanding Their Growth and Market Potential
Since 2020, the stablecoin market has witnessed a remarkable growth trajectory, expanding by 76 times and surpassing the $300 billion mark in supply. However, despite this impressive growth, stablecoins still account for a minuscule fraction of traditional payment volumes, recently reported to be less than 1% of the total market. A recent collaboration between Artemis and McKinsey reveals that while global annual payment volumes are projected to reach a staggering $2 quadrillion by 2025, the actual use of stablecoins for real-world transactions remains limited, with only $390 billion categorized as legitimate payment activities such as remittances or payroll. This disparity highlights the ongoing challenge for stablecoins to transition from speculative instruments to everyday payment solutions.
The majority of stablecoin usage stems from crypto trading and internal transfers rather than real-world applications. The report underscores that 99% of the current stablecoin volume is linked to speculative activities, signaling a fundamental gap in their integration into daily transactions. Nonetheless, certain sectors are driving stablecoin adoption at a faster pace, particularly in business-to-business (B2B) transactions and card-linked spending. Even with the growth, B2B stablecoin payments represented merely 0.01% of the global B2B transaction landscape, indicating that substantial potential still exists for future expansion.
Year-on-year data illustrates the rapid escalation of B2B stablecoin payments, which soared to $226 billion, reflecting an astonishing growth rate of 733%. This surge primarily positions B2B transactions as a key driver for real-world stablecoin volumes. Peer-to-peer (P2P) payments and consumer-to-business (C2B) transactions follow, accounting for $77 billion and $76 billion, respectively. However, business-to-consumer (B2C) activities like payroll and creator rewards lagged considerably, garnering a mere $10 billion. The vast chasm between these activity levels signifies room for improvement in promoting stablecoins for B2C functions, which traditionally encompass larger volumes of everyday commerce.
It is noteworthy that card-related spending in stablecoins experienced phenomenal growth, with a staggering 673% increase anticipated by 2025. This remarkable expansion positions card-linked transactions as another key sector, alongside B2B payments, showing immense growth potential for payment integrators. Such growth rates suggest that stablecoins might not only serve as speculative assets but may also evolve into viable payment solutions that challenge traditional financial frameworks in the coming years.
An analysis of stablecoin supply uncovers the leading players in this burgeoning market. In the past year, the stablecoin supply has ballooned by over $100 billion, inflating from $204 billion to $307 billion. A significant portion of this growth can be attributed to Tether’s USDT, which contributed around $48 billion, pushing its total market supply to $186 billion. Circle’s USDC also saw substantial growth, adding $26 billion, and raising its supply to $76 billion. Other emerging stablecoins like Sky Protocol’s USDS, PayPal’s PYUSD, and World Liberty Financial’s USD1 reflect the diverse market landscape, yet 99% of stablecoins remain predominantly tied to the U.S. dollar, underlining its dominance.
In conclusion, while real-world stablecoin payments are projected to hit $390 billion by 2025—amounting to less than 1% of the projected global payment volumes—it is evident that the landscape is shifting. The burgeoning growth of B2B transactions and card-related payments could signal a turning point for the stablecoin sector, allowing it to challenge legacy payment systems. As stablecoins continue navigating this transformative journey, their innate advantages of cost-effectiveness and rapid transaction speeds could well position them as viable alternatives within the evolving global payment ecosystem.


