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Today’s Points:

Too Late to Close the Door

The dawn of the stablecoin era, ushered in by the US GENIUS Act, carries the  promise and peril of earlier financial innovations, from credit cards to derivatives. Anchored to fiat currencies and backed by liquid assets such as Treasuries, stablecoins are the crypto world’s closest approach to calm. To some, it’s a revolution in monetary efficiency; to others, every leap in finance brings its own risks. That has grown ever more apparent at this week’s annual meetings of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund in Washington. 

The IMF warned in its financial stability report that the $305 billion stablecoin market poses a systemic threat to the global financial system. Stablecoins face the risk of runs, like banks. Fire sales of assets against which they’re backed — like cash deposits and government securities — could spill into banks, government bonds, and repo markets.

That would mean contagion and a self-fulfilling selling cycle, forcing central banks to intervene. Such risks are hard to ignore. The last wave of new financial products, like collateralized mortgage obligations, had just this effect nearly two decades ago during the Global Financial Crisis. 

The Basel-based Financial Stability Board, chaired by the Bank of England’s Andrew Bailey, argues that without clear regulatory frameworks — such as those envisioned in the Clarity Act that the US House of Representatives passed in July — stablecoins could undermine financial stability and thwart the development of a resilient digital-asset ecosystem. The European Stability Mechanism’s managing director Pierre Gramegna even said that “if they’re not guaranteed as central bank money, then obviously there’s a risk to the whole financial system, not just in Europe, but the whole world.”

Such warnings may be weighing on performance. The Bloomberg Galaxy DeFi Index, which tracks the market performance and health of decentralized finance, has been having a tough time:

And with great irony, this burst of crypto activity comes as the “barbarous relic” of gold enjoys a historic rally:

Despite the skepticism, stablecoins’ promise is undeniable: They can be the bridge between crypto and the conventional payments system. Bitcoin was created to disrupt traditional banking but has so far barely had any effect on it. Now, Dante Disparte of Circle Internet Group Inc. argues that stablecoins have broken through into global payments and are drawing serious institutional interest.

It is probably the first time in a very long time, if not ever, in the United States, that we have a technology-neutral, pro-competition piece of legislation that… reconciles the FinTech federalism that for many years has sort of held payments innovations at bay. Now the US is starting to take its place at the table. 

Since the passage of the GENIUS Act, he says, “You've seen this wave of institutional interests come to play… embarked on this kind of Cambrian explosion of interest and innovation in this market.”

The SWIFT network, backbone of global money and securities transfers, is also pushing stablecoins into the mainstream. It recently unveiled plans for a blockchain-based ledger to handle digital-asset transactions, including stablecoins. This would expand digital finance across more than 200 countries and territories. Banks such as JPMorgan, Bank of America, and Deutsche are providing feedback on the prototype.

The financial system needs to be resilient. A brief outage, or anything to shake trust, could be disruptive in a really bad way. Unease about moving on from a system that does work is natural. But SWIFT’s Tom Zschach says the network is responding to customer demand: 

This is not really about disruption. It’s about choice. If you’re happy with the banking relationship you have, or you’re served very well as a corporate treasurer, you don’t have to do anything. Or you might say, there’s a better way to do that. There’s another service offered to me that’s faster and cheaper and safer. It’s kind of moving past this idea of this parallel universe. And people can see both tangible evidence of it working with some of the early use cases. 

Stablecoins are already giving central banks a monetary-policy migraine. Jessica Renier of the Institute of International Finance notes that emerging markets’ growing use of dollar-backed stablecoins raises red flags about dollarization. As the coins can be moved swiftly across borders and skirt traditional channels, they might undermine capital controls. That’s a delicate challenge for central banks trying to preserve their monetary sovereignty. Crypto is an alternative to the dollar, but stablecoins might increase its power as a reserve currency.

None of this justifies “overregulation” out of abundance of caution, argues Eugene Ludwig of Ludwig Advisors — who as comptroller of the currency at the US Treasury in the 1990s took a leading role in peeling back the Depression-era Glass-Steagall banking regulations. He argues that the Dodd-Frank Act after the Global Financial Crisis created an overly constrained financial sector in which banks are reluctant to innovate:

By working with a new invention, you never know exactly what the steam engine would do, or the car would do, or whatever it is. It doesn’t mean to stop them, but when there are problems with them, you have to be prepared to jump in, solve those problems, and move on with what’s good about the technology, not what turns out to be problematic. 

The crisis, which followed the deregulation of the 1990s, demonstrated just how difficult it is to distinguish the good and bad aspects of innovation in real time, but this appears to be the approach regulators are trying to adopt.

At best, the risks of decentralized finance can be mitigated — but eliminating them entirely isn’t realistic. The pragmatic approach is to embrace the technology while managing its challenges in ways that don’t choke off innovation. It’s a difficult and hazardous path but the one the technocrats in Washington will try to follow.

Richard Abbey in Washington

Land of Rising Political Uncertainty

Japan has long been politically stable to a fault. That helps explain why one of the most surprising political episodes in its postwar history hasn’t thus far been punished by investors.

The Liberal Democratic Party, for decades the hegemonic party but now ruling without an overall majority in either house of the legislature, surprised everyone by choosing Sanae Takaichi as its new leader earlier this month. Not only does she stand to be Japan’s first female prime minister, but her ideas about expansive fiscal and monetary policy imply quite a break from the status quo. Yet a week later, the LDP’s junior coalition partner announced it was withdrawing support. While Takaichi must piece together a new working majority, it’s theoretically possible for other parties to agree on a different premier. This is what Polymarket makes of it:

Takaichi’s odds are improving because there is minimal chance of agreement on any other candidate, while polls suggest that she is a popular choice with the electorate. The clearest financial effect of the uncertainty has been in expectations for the Bank of Japan, which is engaged in a painfully slow “normalization” of interest rates after holding them at zero for many years. Before Takaichi’s surprise victory in the LDP election, a hike at the BOJ’s meeting at the end of this month was thought likely. Now, overnight index swaps suggest its’s virtually out of the question:

That has weakened the yen, which is great news for the many around the world who have come to regard its rock-bottom interest rates as an eternal source of cheap money. Takaichi’s elevation as party leader even brought the carry trade with the Mexican peso (in which investors borrow in yen and feast on Mexico’s high interest rates) to its first high since Claudia Sheinbaum won last year’s Mexican presidential election (another first for women). Investors feared that Sheinbaum’s emphatic win presaged governmental overreach and sold the peso — but Takaichi’s ascent reassured them that they could bet against the yen:

At present, Takaichi is lining up a coalition with the Japan Innovation Party (JIP) — but the conventional wisdom is that she will probably govern on her own, piecing together votes from at least two other parties in the highly fractured Diet for each bill. That might perversely free the BOJ’s hand. Mansoor Mohi-Uddin of the Bank of Singapore argues: “With the LDP having to govern alone, the Bank of Japan may face less pressure to refrain from hiking interest rates. We thus see the BOJ lifting its overnight call rate 25 basis points at its next meeting on Oct. 30 to the benefit of the yen.”

It could also mean looser fiscal policy. Governments piecing together coalitions issue by issue tend to err on the side of spending more, as this is the path of least resistance. Jin Kenzaki of Societe Generale puts the odds on a minority government rather than a formal coalition at 50%: 

Some believe that the LDP’s governance will become more unstable than before, making the continuation of Takaichi's expansionary fiscal policy and monetary easing policies less feasible. However, the Democratic Party for the People, which is likely to cooperate, is in favor of continuing expansionary fiscal policy and monetary easing, and the JIP, which is also likely to cooperate, is not opposed to it either. 

Bond yields remain their highest in decades, while stock market optimism was only slightly dimmed by the fall of the coalition. An attempt to shake up corporate Japan and stimulate the economy, as promised by Takaichi in her campaign, still probably lies ahead.

Survival Tips

Here is a Tip for President Trump, and anyone planning to travel to next year’s World Cup — the final should not be held at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. The president says Boston, Seattle and San Francisco might lose Cup games because of dodgy security, which is ridiculous. The final has been held twice each in Rio de Janeiro and Mexico City and once in Johannesburg; wonderful cities with far greater security issues than Boston or Seattle. But the final shouldn’t be at the MetLife, which sits in a car park surrounded  by wind-swept marshland poorly served by public transport from New York. The place is soulless. It takes hours to get in and get out, and it’s not a soccer stadiumGoing there is a chore. FIFA’s press release about the “iconic” venue is laughable and must have been written by someone who had never been there.

Hold it in the Azteca or the Olympic Stadium in Mexico City (good enough for World Cups won by Pele and Maradona, and Bob Beamon’s long jump), for an electric atmosphere in a city that loves the sport. Or one of the great US college stadiums — the 1994 final went well at Pasadena’s Rose Bowl. Please tell FIFA they’ve made a mistake, Mr. President. And if you’re visiting the US for the tournament, catch a game anywhere other than the MetLife. 

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