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The Window is Closing for Canada’s Stablecoin Opportunity
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| Citation | Peter MacKenzie and Zelmer, Mark. 2026. "The Window is Closing for Canada’s Stablecoin Opportunity." Intelligence Memos. Toronto: C.D. Howe Institute. |
| Page Title: | The Window is Closing for Canada’s Stablecoin Opportunity – C.D. Howe Institute |
| Article Title: | The Window is Closing for Canada’s Stablecoin Opportunity |
| URL: | https://cdhowe.org/publication/the-window-is-closing-for-canadas-stablecoin-opportunity/ |
| Published Date: | February 25, 2026 |
| Accessed Date: | February 27, 2026 |
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From: Peter MacKenzie and Mark Zelmer
To: Stablecoin watchers
Date: February 25, 2026
Re: The Window is Closing for Canada’s Stablecoin Opportunity
The New York Stock Exchange announcement of a new blockchain-based platform brings us one step closer to a world in which finance operates around the clock, settles instantly, and runs on programmable digital money.
Blockchain will enable 24/7 trading of tokenized stocks and exchange-traded funds. Tokenization converts traditional financial assets into digital tokens on a blockchain, allowing them to be traded and settled using stablecoins and tokenized bank deposits rather than through conventional payment systems.
Canada needs a two-track regulatory framework to navigate the transition to these new forms of trading, we explain in our new C.D. Howe Institute Commentary.
Track 1 would govern “pure payment” stablecoins – digital tokens fully backed by high-quality liquid assets under Bank of Canada oversight.
Track 2 would cover tokenized bank deposits that would continue to be supervised by the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions and its provincial counterparts.
Why two tracks? Because regulation should not treat a stablecoin designed for payments as a stock or ETF, while a tokenized bank deposit should retain all the benefits and protections Canadians currently receive from their bank accounts.
Policymakers should also reconsider the prohibition of interest payments in the proposed stablecoin legislation. Issuers will find ways to pass value to holders – think free toasters, or today’s equivalent: rewards programs and fee waivers. The interest prohibition merely adds complexity, which may limit the competitive appeal of Canadian dollar stablecoins relative to US alternatives. The Americans’ GENIUS Act also bans interest payments but exchange platforms like Coinbase already offer yields exceeding 3 percent on US dollar stablecoins held with them.
Canada’s early history warns against allowing money of different values to be used for payment. The wide variety of coins in circulation before the introduction of paper money complicated trade and caused confusion. The same was true during America’s “Free Banking Era” from 1836 to 1865. State banks issued competing currencies that traded at varying discounts; roughly a third of currency was counterfeit; and financial panics were common.
Modern technology would reduce the informational problem: Real-time exchange rates are trivial to compute. But when money itself isn’t fully fungible every transaction would carry some settlement risk, liquidity would be fragmented across platforms, and the possibility of a stablecoin de-pegging – as occurred with TerraUSD in 2022 – could trigger broader instability. Even small frictions, multiplied across millions of daily transactions, would become a meaningful drag on economic activity. Privately issued stablecoins – backed by different reserves and operating on different platforms – would risk recreating this fragmentation in digital form.
A central bank digital currency could help prevent this. It would provide a neutral settlement layer between competing stablecoin issuers and a public interested in converting stablecoins to central bank money, all without necessarily having to involve a commercial bank in the process.
The United States so far has rejected this path. The GENIUS Act provides a framework for private stablecoin issuers but without a central-bank component. Canada could therefore offer something US stablecoins do not: Integration with central bank money that provides superior stability and a settlement layer backed by the Canadian government, thus ensuring a Canadian dollar would be worth a Canadian dollar no matter who issued the digital token representing it.
We also recommend extending access to Bank of Canada liquidity facilities to regulated issuers of stablecoins linked to the Canadian dollar on the same basis as to deposit-taking institutions. This would allow issuers to pledge reserve assets as collateral during redemption surges rather than sell them in ways that could exacerbate market strains. The US Federal Reserve does not extend such facilities to stablecoin issuers, so this would be another potential competitive advantage for Canadian dollar linked stablecoins.
The Bank of Canada paused its work on a digital currency of its own in 2024, citing privacy concerns. Such concerns clearly deserve attention. But they could be addressed with a wholesale level currency available only to financial institutions and regulated stablecoin issuers, that would obviate individual-level retail privacy concerns. It would make both cross-stablecoin transactions and conversions between stablecoins and traditional bank deposits easier and safer for users and help ensure a dollar is always worth a dollar.
Network effects in payment systems generally reward first movers so the window for action is narrowing. The NYSE and NASDAQ announcements signal that tokenization and instant settlement are becoming mainstream. Canada’s Stablecoin Act is a necessary first step, but the design and implementation of the supporting regulatory infrastructure will determine whether we can help shape this future or merely react to it.
Peter MacKenzie is a senior policy analyst at the C.D. Howe Institute, where Mark Zelmer is a fellow-in-residence.
To send a comment or leave feedback, email us at blog@cdhowe.org.
The views expressed here are those of the authors. The C.D. Howe Institute does not take corporate positions on policy matters.
A version of this Memo first appeared in the Financial Post.
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