August 22, 2025
at
11:35 am
EST
MIN READ
Christopher Waller, of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, stated on Wednesday that stablecoins were a “payments revolution” and a great example of private sector-led innovation in payments.
Waller said that there was “nothing scary” about stablecoins and that they are simply the next technological stage in an ongoing payments evolution.
Waller was speaking at the Wyoming Blockchain Symposium in Jackson Hole which started on the 18th August and ended on the 21st. Also taking place in Jackson Hole is the annual meeting of central bankers, economists and policymakers hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.
The Governor spoke fawningly about smart contracts, tokenization and distributed ledgers, arguing these will soon be commonplace for all payment transactions.
Waller used memecoins as an example of a transaction during his speech:
“I buy a meme coin and use a stablecoin as the means of payment. The transaction takes place using a smart contract. Finally, the transaction is recorded on a distributed ledger.”
The speech is another interesting moment in what has been a “Stablecoin Summer” with the GENIUS Act - which provides a comprehensive framework for stablecoins in the US - passing in July, corporations like Amazon and Walmart exploring stablecoin integration, Wyoming launching a state-backed stablecoin, and China exploring the idea of a yuan-backed stablecoin.
Not to mention, Circle, the issuer of USDC, had its IPO in June and the EU fast-tracking its launch of a digital euro.
At the time of writing, the total stablecoin market cap is $278 billion. Experts predict it could be over $2 trillion by 2028.
Attention will now turn to Jerome Powell’s last ever Jackson Hole speech as Fed Chair today. Investors will be looking for any clues about the future direction of interest rates. It comes at a pivotal time with US economic data showing a very mixed bag.