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Are stablecoins the true winners? Druckenmiller's statement indicates that the narrative has shifted from Bitcoin speculation to payments and yields.
Stablecoin Wars: From “When Will It Take Off” to “It’s Already Infrastructure”
CoinDesk posted a tweet about Stanley Druckenmiller’s views on stablecoins, which received 277,000 views and was retweeted by 15 major accounts. But popularity isn’t the main point. The key is that he shifted the discussion from “when will it moon” back to “this is the payment and settlement infrastructure,” splitting the market into two camps: one continues chasing volatility, the other begins building the payment layer.
Latest reports from Cointelegraph and Decrypt show that the stablecoin market cap is around $315 billion, up from just $55 billion five years ago. Druckenmiller’s endorsement makes the idea of “faster, cheaper payment channels” more credible. On-chain data supports this: Tether’s supply is about $186 billion, far surpassing competitors; this is real money flowing into practical use cases, not meme coins or gambling.
Public opinion is divided: bulls believe the adoption curve has been validated, skeptics see it as “rich guys just talking.” Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong said “Druckenmiller is right,” emphasizing stablecoins can solve payment friction. Scott Bessent from the U.S. Treasury predicts stablecoins will reach $3 trillion by 2030, linking this to the favorable environment created by the GENIUS Act.
My view: Many people’s obsession with “Bitcoin as digital gold” still dates back to 2020. But by 2025, on-chain stablecoin trading volume has already exceeded $33 trillion, surpassing Visa and Mastercard. At this point, the fact that Bitcoin’s NUPL is 0.2366 is less important than the reality that funds are shifting toward “practicality/infrastructure.”
10-15 Years? Maybe Faster, or Maybe Stuck
Druckenmiller’s timeline is 10-15 years. But on-chain signals and neutral funding rates (BTC/ETH perpetual funding rate at 0.0000%) suggest the process could speed up or slow down.
Reports from Bitcoin.com and Chaincatcher link this to improvements in blockchain productivity; Foresight Ventures believes it will strengthen the “USD peg.” Korean media (like Coinreaders) interpret it as Bitcoin moving toward reserve currency—though I think this misreads the reality of “payment and settlement”: BTC’s NVT of 37.3 indicates network strength, not dominance in payments.
Market positioning is shifting toward “de-volatileization”: in the context of a $1.4 trillion BTC market cap, funds prefer stablecoin issuers. I believe the market underestimates regulatory risks: if GENIUS compliance isn’t properly implemented, adoption could slow. Meanwhile, long-term ETHB trusts might be an undervalued hedge position.
The data supporting these differing views is already available, but the real catalyst lies in “neutral signals”: BTC valuation remains fair (MVRV 1.31), while stablecoins are accelerating.
Key Points
Summary: The mid- to long-term opportunity for stablecoin infrastructure favors participants capable of connecting to a $3 trillion market before 2030. Builders outweigh traders; priority should shift toward compliant stablecoins.
Conclusion:
It’s still an early window for entry. The most advantage goes to builders, long-term holders, and funds—those who can capture the medium- to long-term benefits of payment and yield infrastructure. Short-term traders focused on volatility are at a disadvantage in this narrative.