Stablecoins are still often described as digital dollars for crypto users. That is not wrong. It is just no longer the full picture.
The bigger shift now is that stablecoins and the yield products built around them are moving deeper into the machinery of finance itself. They are starting to matter less as visible consumer products and more as settlement tools, reserve components, and competitive pressure on traditional banking infrastructure.
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Why stablecoins are becoming infrastructure
Aster’s latest move is a good example. Every real-world-asset perpetual contract on Aster will settle exclusively in USD1, World Liberty Financial’s dollar-pegged stablecoin, starting with gold, silver, crude oil, and Brent crude.
In plain terms, USD1 is being placed directly into the infrastructural system of a trading venue as the base asset that keeps the market running. That is a stronger position than simply being one more stablecoin on a token list.
@Aster_DEX x @worldlibertyfi 🦅
Aster and WLFI are working together to support closer ecosystem alignment, with both sides exploring integration across their respective tokens.
USD1 is becoming the base layer for RWAs on Aster.
Commodities and other RWA markets are moving… pic.twitter.com/sk1oLL11PZ
— Aster 🥷 (@Aster_DEX) April 6, 2026
Stablecoins and yield products are moving beyond crypto-native use
Ethena points to the same shift. The company is finalizing overcollateralized stablecoin lending agreements with Anchorage Digital, Maple Institutional, and Coinbase Asset Management.
It is also exploring broader reserve diversification into tokenized T-bills, collateralized loan obligations, investment-grade corporate bond funds, and other credit structures.
That suggests yield products are moving beyond crypto-native basis trades and getting closer to institutional reserve management and credit intermediation.
USDe reserves are evolving: reducing concentration and building resilience across market cycles with a diversified collateral base.
Four additions to the collateral backing are detailed below for consideration by the risk committee, each a natural extension of existing Ethena… pic.twitter.com/66r3HElsGC
— Ethena (@ethena) April 6, 2026
Banks are starting to treat this as real competition
Then there is JPMorgan. In the social media, an interview caused quite a loud buzz after Jamie Dimon said blockchain-based players are becoming “new competitors,” specifically naming stablecoins, smart contracts, and tokenization.
The same report says yield-bearing stablecoins have become, and still are, a point of friction in Washington because banks argue they offer bank-like returns without bank-like regulation.
That matters because the pressure is no longer theoretical. Large banks are openly treating blockchain-based financial rails as a real competitive threat, and they are afraid. After years of calling the funny money. Oh, the irony.
What users may notice later
There is a fairly simple takeaway here. Stablecoins become more important when they stop being the headline and start becoming the default layer underneath trading, lending, and settlement.
But what is next? A small number of stablecoins gain a real infrastructure advantage because they become embedded in market workflows.
Simply because they can do what traditional currencies can, but fit better to a digitalized economy. And maybe sooner than expected, banks may end up competing not just with crypto brands, but with new settlement standards that start pulling value away from the old financial pipes.
Cryptocurrency and Web3 expert, founder of Kriptoworld
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With years of experience covering the blockchain space, András delivers insightful reporting on DeFi, tokenization, altcoins, and crypto regulations shaping the digital economy.
📅 Published: April 9, 2026 • 🕓 Last updated: April 9, 2026
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