---
title: "The debate between tokenized deposits and stablecoins: The future of finance is not replacement but integration."
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/269085800.md"
description: "The article discusses the debate between tokenized deposits and stablecoins, highlighting the need for integration rather than replacement in finance. Tokenized deposits offer low-cost credit within banks, while stablecoins provide cash-like settlements outside the banking system. Both are essential for future financial infrastructure, enabling interoperability and composable money. The future of finance is on-chain, requiring both systems to coexist and complement each other."
datetime: "2025-12-09T12:26:29.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/269085800.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/269085800.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/269085800.md)
---

# The debate between tokenized deposits and stablecoins: The future of finance is not replacement but integration.

Author: Simon Taylor Translator: Block unicorn

Banks create money, stablecoins facilitate money flow. We need both.

Proponents of tokenized deposits say, "Stablecoins are unregulated shadow banking. Once banks tokenize deposits, everyone will be more inclined to choose banks."

Some banks and central banks like this argument.

Proponents of stablecoins say, "Banks are dinosaurs. We don't need them on-chain. Stablecoins are the future of money." Crypto natives particularly love this narrative. Both sides are missing the point. Banks offer cheaper credit to their biggest customers. You deposit $100 and it becomes a $90 loan (or more). That's how fractional-reserve banks work. For centuries, it has been an engine of economic growth. Fortune 500 companies deposit $500 million with JPMorgan Chase. In return, they receive massive lines of credit at below-market interest rates. Deposits are the core of a bank's business model, and large corporations are well aware of this. Tokenized deposits bring this mechanism onto the blockchain, but they only serve the bank's own customers. You remain under the bank's regulatory purview, still subject to its operating hours, processes, and compliance requirements. For businesses needing low-cost credit lines, tokenized deposits are a good option. Stablecoins are like cash. Circle and Tether hold 100% of reserves, equivalent to $200 billion in bonds. They earn a 4-5% yield but don't pay you any fees. In return, the funds you receive are not subject to any bank regulation. It is projected that $9 trillion will be transferred across borders via stablecoins by 2025. They can be used anytime, anywhere with an internet connection, requiring no permissions and operating 24/7. No need for correspondent bank inquiries, no waiting for SWIFT clearing, and no waiting for "we'll reply to you in 3-5 business days." Stablecoins are a good option for companies that need to pay Argentine suppliers by 11 pm on Saturdays. The future holds both: a company looking for good credit lines from banks may also want to use stablecoins as a channel to enter long-tail markets. Imagine this scenario: A Fortune 500 company holds a tokenized deposit with JPMorgan Chase. In return, it receives a preferential credit line for its US operations. It needs to make a payment to an Argentinian supplier that prefers stablecoins. So, it exchanges JPMD for USDC. This is an example of our future direction. On-chain. Atomic. Both. Use traditional channels where applicable. Use stablecoins where inapplicable. This isn't an either-or choice, but rather a balance between the two. Tokenized deposits → Low-cost credit within the banking system. Stablecoins → Cash-like settlement methods outside the banking system. On-chain exchange → Instant conversion, zero settlement risk. Each has its advantages and disadvantages. They will coexist. On-chain payments \> APIs for payment orchestration. Some large banks might say, "We don't need tokenized deposits, we have APIs," and in some cases, they are correct. This is precisely the advantage of on-chain finance. Smart contracts can build logic across multiple businesses and individuals. When a supplier's deposit arrives, a smart contract can automatically trigger inventory financing, working capital financing, and currency hedging. These operations can be completed automatically and instantly by both banks and non-bank institutions. Deposit → Stablecoin → Payment Invoice → Downstream Payment Complete. APIs are peer-to-peer, while smart contracts are many-to-many. This makes them ideal for workflows across organizational boundaries. This is the power of on-chain finance. This is a fundamentally different financial services architecture. The future belongs on-chain. Tokenized deposits solve the problem of low-cost credit. Deposits are locked. Banks lend against these deposits. Their business model remains unchanged. Stablecoins solve the problem of fund portability. Funds can move anywhere without permission. Global Southern countries can access USD. Businesses can get fast settlements. Proponents of tokenized deposits only want regulated payment channels. Proponents of stablecoins want to replace banks. The future requires both. Fortune 500 companies want massive lines of credit from banks and instant global settlements. Emerging markets want local credit creation and dollar gateways. DeFi wants composability and real-world asset backing. Debating who will win ignores what's happening. The future of finance is on-chain. Tokenized deposits and stablecoins are both necessary infrastructure for achieving this. Stop debating who will win. Start building interoperability. Composable money.

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