Agreed. A euro-denominated stablecoin makes sense for fast cross-border payments without FX risk, especially if the goal is reducing dependence on USD rails. It fits neatly with the EU’s push for payment sovereignty and an independent financial stack.👌
That’s exactly the problem. “Reversible in theory” doesn’t mean much if banks can’t or won’t act fast. Without real-time intervention and enforcement, the protections are mostly on paper, by the time they move, the money’s already gone.👌
For the past 11years I only transact with Crypto and I feel very much comfortable because any mistake I make is traceable and also refundable with zero charge. Almost everyone here in US has adapted to Crypto. The bank is just a reflection of the bad government. 👎
I read almost all the comments here, your words are just exactly my thoughts. 👌
Exactly. Once a Digital Euro is live, most of crypto’s “use case” evaporates. Same speed and convenience, but with consumer protections, reversibility, and real institutional backing.👌
Exactly, You said my mind. If the game isn’t rational, pretending it is just gets you wrecked. You either adapt to the madness or get priced out by it.
Exactly 👌
Nowadays humanity is not in existence!!!
Alphonsus
0 post score0 comment score
That’s basically the core use case: fast, borderless transfers without volatility. Beyond that, they’re mostly used as on/off ramps inside crypto, a parking place during market swings, and for dollar denominated settlement where traditional banking is slow or unavailable.👌