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Eliminating archaic payments systems with stablecoins

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Opinion by: Simon McLoughlin, CEO at Uphold

2021 witnessed a fintech investment boom, with startups raising approximately $229 billion globally. Higher interest rates and tighter economic circumstances have since tempered that exuberance, but funds continue to pile into the sector. Indeed, the global fintech sector is expected to see a rebound in investment activity throughout 2025.

Why are investors continuing to bet big on this sector? The answer is simple. The current international finance system is in urgent need of modernization. Built for a pre-internet age, it relies on outdated processes, chains of intermediaries and a patchwork of non-standard regulations. 

An aging and expensive system

Take SWIFT as a case in point. Founded in 1973, SWIFT remains the backbone of cross-border payments. SWIFT is nothing more than a messaging system that enables banks to communicate around transactions. It was never designed to manage funds or process transactions. As a result, a “make do and mend” approach has grown around international payments, characterized by a proliferation of intermediaries and local payment rails.

This antiquated, fragmented system creates significant friction in cross-border transactions, leading to delays, high costs and limited choice for individuals and businesses outside major economic blocs. Fees for international payments currently average 1.5% for businesses and all the way up to 6.3% for remittances. Payments can take up to several days to reach recipients.

This system hinders global commerce and exacerbates financial exclusion, particularly in the global south, where volatile local currencies and limited access to traditional banking services are common.

Many of these friction points could be resolved by stablecoins, making transferring money across borders as easy as sending an email. Indeed, the blockchain-based currency has the potential to revolutionize global finance. 

Democratizing access to fiat currencies

For people in countries with volatile economies or unstable governments, stablecoins offer a safe haven for savings. Stablecoins pegged 1:1 to a fiat currency such as the US dollar provide consumers in these regions with a way to escape their national financial system with a trustworthy and transparent alternative that protects them from inflation and currency devaluation. This is particularly important in the global south, where economic instability can erode the value of hard-earned income and savings. 

According to UBS, consumers in developing countries are also attracted to stablecoins due to the lower risk of government interference with the currency. The wealth management firm believes stablecoins are increasingly seen as “digital dollars” and used for everything from savings to transactions to remittances in these regions. 

Empowering small businesses and freelancers

Stablecoins can significantly reduce the costs and complexities associated with international payments, enabling small businesses and freelancers to participate in the global marketplace on a more level playing field. This opens up new opportunities for entrepreneurship and economic growth in developing countries.

Recent: Dubai recognizes USDC, EURC as first stablecoins under token regime

In our current payment system, physical money does not cross borders — only information does. A payroll company looking to pay a freelancer in a third country cannot do so directly and must use systems like Stripe, which uses virtual bank accounts to get around the problem.

With stablecoins, payroll companies can pay in any currency to any currency, using crypto on- and off-ramps to facilitate the payment. The business pays in dollars, for example, which is on-ramped to Tether’s USDt (USDT) and sent to the freelancer’s digital wallet, where they can either keep it or off-ramp it to their local currency. Stablecoins will prove to be, and are, a vital tool in helping businesses access global talent and fill their skills gaps. 

Facilitating financial inclusion

Through offering an alternative to traditional banking systems, stablecoins also provide financial services to the unbanked and underbanked populations. This can be particularly transformative in regions with limited access to traditional financial infrastructure or in countries like Argentina, where there is low confidence in the national monetary system. 

According to the Bank for International Settlements, stablecoins can enable a wide range of payments and provide a gateway to other financial services, replicating the role of transaction accounts as a stepping stone to broader financial inclusion. 

Given their ability to provide access to financial services anywhere with an internet connection, stablecoins are seeing explosive growth in emerging markets. Use cases are expanding rapidly across Africa, Latin America, and parts of developing Asia, where they are being used to hedge against inflation, for remittances and cross-border payments, and as a simpler alternative to US dollar banking. This growth trajectory can be expected to continue in the years ahead. 

A shot in the arm for global business

Stablecoins are rapidly rising in popularity and already total more than $233 billion in market capitalization, while transaction volumes in 2024 reached $15.6 trillion, surpassing those of Visa. In an increasingly uncertain world, they offer a stable, low-cost and rapid means of transferring money across borders, helping to increase financial inclusion and smooth access to global talent for employers. Stablecoins are a digital-first financial tool for a digital-first world and are ideally suited to replacing the current archaic international payments system. 

Opinion by: Simon McLoughlin, CEO at Uphold

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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44% are bullish over crypto AI token prices: CoinGecko survey

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Nearly half of crypto pundits in a recent survey are bullish over crypto AI tokens prices — which could bode well for the $23.6 billion crypto market sector. 

Of the 2,632 respondents surveyed by CoinGecko between February and March, 25% were “fully bullish,” and 19.3% indicated they were “somewhat bullish” for crypto AI tokens in 2025.

Around 29% of respondents were neutral on the subject, while a combined 26.3% were either somewhat bearish or bearish. 

Responses on crypto AI product sentiment. Source: CoinGecko

The survey response was similar when it came to crypto AI products, which comes as the “use cases combining crypto with AI have improved and are seeing more widespread adoption,” said CoinGecko’s crypto research analyst Yuqian Lim.

“This perhaps shows that crypto participants are not differentiating between crypto AI’s investing or trading potential and the technology itself,” said Lim. 

“Such market sentiments might in turn reflect expectations that now is the time for crypto AI to move beyond the conceptual stage and mature as a sector.”

CoinGecko’s cryptocurrency tracker shows that the top artificial intelligence coins by market capitalization are around $23.6 billion, led by Near Protocol (NEAR), Internet Computer (ICP) and Bittensor (TAO). 

There’s also a separate group of AI agent coins, such as Artificial Super Intelligence (FET), Virtuals Protocol (VIRTUAL), ai16z (AI16z) and others, which command a market cap of $4.5 billion. 

CoinGecko surveyed 2,632 participants between Feb. 20 and March 10 and grouped participants whether they were long-term crypto investors or short-term traders. 

It also asked participants to categorize themselves on whether they saw themselves as early or late adopters and laggards of crypto AI.

It found that some of the earliest adopters — known as “innovators” — had a higher share of bearishness compared to some of the later adopters. “Laggards” were the most bearish, in line with expectations. 

Responses on crypto AI product sentiment between the innovator, early adopter, early majority, late majority and laggard groups. Source: CoinGecko

Related: 83% of institutions plan to up crypto allocations in 2025: Coinbase

Spencer Farrar, a partner at the AI and crypto-focused venture capital firm Theory Ventures, recently told Cointelegraph that these AI applications are “a bit frothy” at the moment, but more utility could come down the line.

Farrar expects to see further experimentation with crypto AI tokens, as they allow retail investors to speculate on smaller market cap ideas that largely aren’t as accessible in the stock market.

“Things tend to start off like this in the open-source world; you see a ton of tinkering, and then perhaps we’ll see something really big come of it.”

Crypto AI verticals that Farrar’s firm has a close eye on include decentralized GPU provider protocols, decentralized data providers, payment infrastructure for AI agents leveraging blockchain tech and crypto trading bots.

“There’s also an opportunity for crypto to be used as a video to authenticate content as AI-generated or human-generated,” Farrar added.

Magazine: Memecoins are ded — But Solana ‘100x better’ despite revenue plunge

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ETH mega pump coming? Ether on exchanges falls to near-decade low

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Ether’s supply on crypto exchanges has dropped to its lowest level since November 2015, leading some analysts to predict a major price rally despite recent bearish sentiment.

“Ethereum’s holders have now brought the available supply on exchanges down to 8.97M, the lowest amount in nearly 10 years (November, 2015),” crypto analytics platform Santiment said in a March 20 X post.

Ether’s supply on crypto exchanges has reached its lowest point since November 2015. Source: Santiment

Santiment said ETH had been rapidly leaving crypto exchanges, with balances now 16.4% lower than at the end of January. This suggests that investors are moving their ETH into cold storage wallets for long-term holding, potentially holding more conviction that Ether’s (ETH) price will rise in the future.

A significant decline in ETH supply across crypto exchanges can signal a potential price surge soon, commonly known as a “supply shock.” However, a surge will only happen if demand remains strong or increases to outpace the reduced supply.

It was recently seen in Bitcoin (BTC). On Jan. 13, Bitcoin reserves on all crypto exchanges dropped to 2.35 million BTC, hitting a nearly seven-year low that was last seen in June 2018. Just a week later, Bitcoin surged to a new high of $109,000 amid the inauguration of US President Donald Trump.

Some crypto traders and analysts anticipate a similar scenario for Ether.

Crypto trader Crypto General told their 230,800 X followers that it is “Just a question of time before the big supply shock.”

Crypto commentator Ted said in a March 19 X post that with ETH supply on crypto exchanges decreasing by the day, “buyers will soon compete, leading to bidding wars.”

Related: ‘Successful’ ETH ETF less perfect without staking — BlackRock

Meanwhile, crypto trader Naber said in an X post on the same day that the largest ETH accumulation is taking place, and it may lead to Ether reaching the $8,000 to $10,000 price range. Even at the lower end of $8,000, Ether would be up 64% from its all-time high of $4,878, reached in November 2021.

While the supply decline is giving crypto traders hope for ETH, other signals have recently cast a bearish shadow over the asset.

Its performance against Bitcoin has been at its lowest in five years. Daan Crypto Trades said in a March 19 X post that it is “unlikely to see this anywhere near its highs anytime soon.”

Ether is down 26% over the past 30 days. Source: CoinMarketCap

Ether is currently trading at $1,971, down 26% over the past month according to CoinMarketCap data. Meanwhile, spot Ether ETFs have had 12 straight days of outflows totaling $370.6 million, according to Farside data.

“This has been one brutal downtrend,” Daan Crypto Trades added.

Scott Melker, aka “The Wolf of All Streets,” said, “Either Ethereum bounces here and this is a generational bottom, or it’s over.”

Magazine: Memecoins are ded — But Solana ‘100x better’ despite revenue plunge

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

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Trump’s crypto czar meets UAE’s national security adviser on crypto, AI

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White House crypto and AI czar David Sacks was among a number of Trump administration officials who recently met with United Arab Emirates officials to discuss emerging technologies and UAE’s potential plans to increase its investment in the United States. 

Sheikh Tahnoon Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the Gulf nation’s national security adviser and brother of the country’s president, said in a March 20 X post that he had spoken with Sacks about AI’s impact, “the expanding role of digital currencies” along with “the investment opportunities emerging at their convergence.”

US President Donald Trump hosted Tahnoon for dinner at the White House on March 18 and posted on his Truth Social platform a day later that he and senior US officials discussed with Tahnoon “ways for our countries to increase our partnership for the advancing of our economic and technological futures.”

Tahnoon (left) meeting with Trump (right) in the Oval Office. Source: Donald Trump

The exact details of Tahnoon’s multiple discussions were not made public, but Bloomberg reported on March 19 that people familiar with his meeting with Trump said he planned to talk about technology, energy and increasing the UAE’s investment in the US.

Multiple posts on Tahnoon’s X account show him meeting Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to discuss trade and investment between the two nations, along with chatting with White House cost-cutting czar Elon Musk via video call to discuss government systems.

He also spoke about AI with tech executives, including Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang.

David Sacks (left) meeting with Tahnoon (right) to discuss crypto and AI. Source: Tahnoon Bin Zayed Al Nahyan

Bloomberg reported that Tahnoon planned to discuss how the UAE could gain easier access to computer chips after the Biden administration restricted exports on them in 2023 and to note the country’s plans to build tech infrastructure on US soil. 

Related: Eric Trump joins Metaplanet’s strategic board of advisers

Tahnoon is the chair of the investment firm MGX, which reportedly plans to throw $7 billion into a $500 billion private-led project called “Stargate” to build AI data centers across the US, which Trump announced just days after returning to the White House.

MGX, which invested $2 billion into Binance earlier this month, is a small part of a $1.5 trillion empire that Tahnoon controls, which includes two of the UAE’s sovereign wealth funds, the country’s largest bank, First Abu Dhabi Bank, and the AI development firm G42.

Magazine: Trump’s crypto ventures raise conflict of interest, insider trading questions 

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