Stablecoins have gained popularity in the crypto industry despite ongoing market volatility.
A Coin Metrics report found that on-chain stablecoin settlements topped $7 trillion this year and is set to reach $8 trillion by the end of the year.
Peter Johnson, venture co-head at Brevan Howard Digital, said in a Wednesday tweet that stablecoin settlements had surpassed those from Mastercard and American Express.
Currently, Visa, the largest card platform, processes $12 trillion a year. According to Johnson, on-chain stablecoin volumes would exceed those from Visa.
Despite his observations, others have noted that credit card and stablecoin settlement volumes are completely different. The former involves consumer spending, with the latter involving cryptocurrency trading and decentralised financing.
Regulations remain the largest obstacle for stablecoins as they are an emerging technology compared to credit cards.
Some lawmakers in the United States Senate have submitted legislation to allow non-state and non-bank entities to issue stablecoins. Such institutions would need to receive a federal licence from the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) backed by “high-quality liquid assets.”
According to current figures, stablecoins also have a market capitalisation of 16.5 percent of the total market, or roughly $140 billion, with Tether (USDT) consisting of 66.3 billion.