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Stablecoin Wars

One Battle After Another

A Letter to Readers

Four months ago, we published “Empire by Code: The Rise of USD Stablecoins” and argued that stablecoins are not merely financial innovation. They are instruments of monetary power. Tools for projecting American hegemony into the digital economy without deploying armies or negotiating treaties.

The response was intense. Some found the thesis compelling. Others dismissed it as conspiratorial or overly deterministic. Many were simply unsure what to make of it.

But we stand by the thesis.

The United States dollar remains the world’s dominant reserve currency not because of superior economic management but because of network effects, institutional depth, and the absence of credible alternatives. Stablecoins do not reverse this dynamic. They accelerate it. By making dollar access frictionless and global, they extend American monetary power into populations and markets that were previously beyond reach.

But identifying a strategic weapon is only half the story.

The question that matters now is which factions will control it. Which American institutions will capture the infrastructure? Under what regulatory framework? With which international partners or adversaries? And at what cost to innovation, privacy, and competition?

This paper examines those questions by mapping the battles already underway.

Not theoretical debates about what might happen someday, but actual conflicts with trillion-dollar stakes being fought right now across multiple fronts. Private issuers versus traditional banks. Regulators waging civil wars over jurisdiction. Nations scrambling to resist dollarization while their citizens vote with their wallets. Technology platforms competing to become the settlement layer for the digital economy.

These battles will determine the shape of American financial power for the next century. They will determine which companies will become the new JPMorgan and which will become the next Blockbuster. They will determine which nations retain monetary sovereignty and which become hollow dependencies. But the outcomes are not predetermined, even if the broader trajectory favors dollar dominance.

To be clear, this paper is not an academic treatise. It is an analysis of power struggles in real time, written for investors, policymakers, and anyone trying to understand how digital money reshapes global finance. Some of what follows represents strongly held convictions backed by structural logic and historical patterns. Other parts are observations about emerging dynamics where the endgame remains uncertain.

We believe the United States will dominate the stablecoin economy for the same reasons it dominated the Eurodollar market and the SWIFT network. Structural advantages compound. Trust, once established, is self-reinforcing. Challengers face coordination problems that incumbents do not.

But we also recognize that this outcome depends on navigating the battles described in this paper successfully. And advantage is not necessarily destiny.

Also, we offer a few caveats before we begin. We own gold. We are not dollar bulls out of ideological commitment or blind patriotism. We assess the world as it is, not as we wish it to be. The dollar’s dominance is not a moral good. It is a structural reality rooted in network effects, legal frameworks, and geopolitical arrangements that other currencies simply do not have and cannot easily replicate.

Further, we do not believe stablecoins fix the problems with fiat money. They make fiat money more efficient at doing what fiat money does, which includes debasement, surveillance, and control.

Our role is not to advocate for this system but to describe it accurately and analyze where power is shifting. Some readers will find the conclusions uncomfortable. Others will disagree with the premises. That is fine. The goal is to provoke serious thinking about forces shaping the future of money, not to declare final answers.

One last point. This paper raises more questions than it answers in certain areas. The battles over yield, the tensions between currency and store of value, the jurisdiction fights between state and federal authorities, remain unresolved. We flag them as critical rather than pretend we know how they will play out.

Where we hold strong opinions, we state them plainly. Where the outcome remains contested, we present the forces in conflict and let readers draw their own conclusions.

The stablecoin wars have already begun.

What follows is a map of the battlefield.

Executive Summary

In “Empire by Code,” we established that USD stablecoins represent more than financial innovation. They are instruments of monetary power capable of extending American hegemony into every corner of the digital economy.

We showed WHY stablecoins matter: they combine the reach of the Eurodollar system with the precision of programmable code, creating a new architecture for projecting dollar dominance without deploying armies or negotiating treaties.

But identifying a strategic weapon is only the beginning.

The question now is WHO will control it, HOW it will be deployed, and WHAT battles will determine its ultimate form. The answers to these questions will determine the shape of global finance for the next century. And those answers are being written right now, in boardrooms and regulatory hearings, in lines of code and geopolitical confrontations, in decisions being made by people who may not fully grasp the magnitude of what they are building.

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