April 04, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
U.S. SEC Staff Clarifies That Most Crypto Stablecoins Aren’t Securities Circle’s IPO Filing Tests Crypto Market Confidence After Trump’s Tariff Shock EigenLayer Finally Ready to Launch Crucial Missing Feature Bitcoin Begins to Decouple From Nasdaq as U.S. Stocks Crumble CoinDesk Weekly Recap: Bitcoin Holds Steady Amid Market Turmoil Crypto-to-Fiat App P2P.me Raises $2M from Multicoin and Coinbase Ventures Gold-Backed Cryptocurrencies Retreat From All-Time Highs Amid Stock-Market Rout Jerome Powell Makes No Promise to Ease Policy; Fed to Stay Focused on Inflation Two Roads Diverged: Choosing the Right Path on Stablecoin Legislation Riot Platforms Hits Post-Halving Bitcoin Production High as It Expands AI Capacity


Brazil’s Largest Bank Itaú Unibanco Mulls its Own Stablecoin

Itaú Unibanco, Brazil’s largest bank by assets, is exploring whether to issue its own stablecoin as regulatory discussions evolve and U.S. financial institutions slowly move into the sector.

The decision could hinge on how American institutions fare with their stablecoin rollouts, said Guto Antunes, head of digital assets at Itaú. At an industry event in São Paulo, Antunes cited the growing momentum behind blockchain-based settlement systems.

“Itaú has always had stablecoins on its radar. We cannot ignore the strength that blockchain has to settle transactions atomically,” local media quoted him saying. Stablecoins, for now, remain a “topic on the agenda.”

The renewed interest in stablecoins comes on the heels of a political shift in the U.S., where lawmakers rejected a central bank digital currency (CBDC) in favor of encouraging private stablecoin alternatives to preserve the dollar’s dominance.

In Brazil, regulators are conducting a public consultation—Consulta Pública No. 111—focused on how stablecoins might fit into the existing financial system. Antunes said the bank is waiting to see what rules the central bank sets before advancing any internal project.

Antunes also raised concerns about a proposed ban on self-custody in Brazil’s draft stablecoin rules. Brazil, it’s worth noting, has barred major pension funds from investing in cryptocurrencies.

This post was originally published on this site