Bank Of Mexico Warns Fragmented Global Rules Expose Stablecoins To...

Bank Of Mexico Warns Fragmented Global Rules Expose Stablecoins To...

The Bank of Mexico's new stability report flags liquidity, contagion and regulatory-arbitrage risks as crypto adoption accelerates in Latin America.

Mexico’s central bank warned in a new financial stability report that “stablecoins pose significant potential risks to financial stability,” citing their rapid growth, links to traditional finance and global regulatory gaps that could fuel arbitrage and magnify market stress.

Stablecoins’ heavy reliance on short-term US Treasurys, market concentration with two issuers controlling 86% of the supply and past depegging episodes with stablecoins underscore how vulnerable the sector remains to stress, according to the Banxico report.

Without coordinated international safeguards, mass redemptions or issuer failures could spill into broader funding markets, the central bank warned.

Banxico also highlighted diverging regulatory approaches as a growing source of risk, noting that frameworks like the EU’s MiCA and the US GENIUS Act impose different reserve, redemption and depositor-protection requirements, creating regulatory gaps that could incentivize arbitrage across jurisdictions.

Banxico acknowledged that stablecoins can improve settlement efficiency, reduce transfer costs and support remittances and liquidity in decentralized finance. However, it plans to keep a cautious distance between the traditional financial system and virtual assets, citing their potential to cause stress in broader markets.

Crypto adoption in Mexico is relatively low. According to Chainalysis’ Global Crypto Adoption Index, the country fell to 23rd place in 2025 from 14th place in 2024 in the adoption ranking.

The central bank’s warning reflects Mexico’s broader cautious stance on crypto. Despite the rise of exchanges like Bitso, the country has not introduced significant new digital-asset legislation and still relies on its 2018 Fintech Law as the primary regulatory framework.

Related: As inflation bites, Latin America banks on stablecoins instead of bankers

While Mexico’s central bank maintains a cautious stance on digital assets, other Latin American countries have embraced adoption.

Source: CoinTelegraph