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The UK needs to regulate and encourage the development of British pound stablecoins to keep the country’s financial services sector globally competitive, according to Mark Fairless, the CEO of banking infrastructure group and fintech company ClearBank.
“Stablecoins are a logical extension to reduce friction in international global payments,” Fairless told Cointelegraph in an interview at Web Summit 2025 in Lisbon, Portugal.
He said that pound stablecoins will never equal the market capitalization of tokens in dollars or euros, because it is not a global reserve currency.
However, the UK needs a British pound stablecoin to maintain business competition as the world changes onchain finance and capital markets on the InternetFairless said. He told Cointelegraph:
“From a capacity perspective for the UK, the ability to settle international payments in real time requires a GBP stablecoin, and if we don’t have one, we risk falling behind other financial sectors.
“The financial services market in the UK is one of our strongest parts of the economy, and so, stablecoins are a logical place to go next,” he said, adding that the effect of stablecoins on the banking sector and traditional business models remains to be seen.
Stablecoins have become geostrategically relevant as governments respond to the growing pressure to put their fiat currencies onchain to maintain competition with countries that integrate digital and blockchain rails into their economies.
Related: Bank of England’s Breeden warns watered-down stablecoin rules for risk stability
Sarah Breeden, deputy governor of the Bank of England, the central bank of the United Kingdom, said that the country will keep pace with US stablecoin regulations and work closely with international partners to synchronize regulatory efforts.
They also breed suggested a cautious approach and warn against loosening stablecoin regulations to the extent that the asset class poses a systemic risk to the banking sector.
The Bank of England has published a consultation paper on Monday outlining a proposal regulatory framework for stablecoins in the United Kingdom.
The proposal included potential reserve requirements, asset taxonomy and risk management regulations for stablecoin issuers and is open for industry feedback until February 2026, with finalized regulations expected in the second half of the year.
Magazine: Unstablecoins: Depegging, bank runs, and other risks loom