A Federal Reserve survey of market contacts found brokerage firms, investors, political advisers and academics increasingly see cryptocurrencies and stablecoins as a potential threat to the stability of the existing financial system.
Roughly 20% of the 24 professionals contacted by the U.S. central bank listed âcryptocurrencies/stablecoinsâ as a potential risk to financial stability. The survey was included in the Fedâs latest semiannual report on financial stability, published Thursday.
Notably, the Fedâs own staffers made no mention of cryptocurrencies in their analysis of the risks. Neither cryptocurrencies nor stablecoins were mentioned in the previous report, published in November.
The top risk cited in the survey was âvaccine-resistant variants,â followed by âsharp rise in real interest ratesâ and âinflation surge.â
Fed staffers did note that âvaluations for some assets are elevated relative to historical norms.â
That assessment echoed Fed Chair Jerome Powellâs remark last week that âyou are seeing things in the capital markets that are a bit frothy.â
He was responding to a reporterâs question mentioning the joke cryptocurrency dogecoin, whose price has jumped 122-fold this year to 60 cents, for a market capitalization of $77.5 billion. Thatâs more than the stock market value of CME, the Chicago-based commodity exchange company.
Prices for bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency by market cap, have doubled this year, for a market value of about $1.05 trillion.
Of course, some bitcoiners see the Federal Reserve as a potential threat to financial stability â speculating that the U.S. central bankâs trillions of dollars of money printing since early 2020 could stoke runaway inflation.