Lead paragraph
Non-USD stablecoins recorded a measurable step-change in early 2026, with supply reaching $1.1 billion in February and aggregated transfer volume expanding by more than 1,600%, according to a Visa and Dune analytics report published in March 2026 (Visa & Dune report, Feb 2026; The Block, Mar 25, 2026). The figures mark a notable acceleration from what had been a market dominated by USD-pegged tokens for most of the last half-decade and elevate questions around cross-border payment use cases, on-chain liquidity, and regulatory responses. While $1.1 billion remains small relative to the overall stablecoin ecosystem denominated in USD, the growth rate and on-chain activity signal changing issuer and user preferences in specific corridors and asset classes. Institutional investors and corporate treasuries tracking payments infrastructure should consider where non-USD instruments could alter settlement costs, FX exposure, and interoperability between blockchains and conventional rails. This piece dissects the data, situates the development in historical context, examines sector implications and risks, and sets out a Fazen Capital perspective on likely next steps.
Context
The Visa and Dune study draws attention because it quantifies on-chain usage patterns rather than off-chain or custody metrics alone. Its headline numbers—$1.1 billion in supply as of February 2026 and aggregated transfer volume up over 1,600%—are grounded in blockchain-level tracing and smart-contract interactions, which provide a different vantage than central exchange listings or off-chain bank deposits. The report, made public in late March 2026 (The Block, Mar 25, 2026), is significant for investors because Visa's analysis focuses on payment flows and Dune's datasets allow granular chain-by-chain breakdowns. That methodology matters: on-chain supply and transfer volumes capture economic activity that can bypass traditional FX corridors and correspondent banking.
Historically, USD-pegged stablecoins like USDT and USDC dominated both market cap and transaction volumes because international trade, invoicing conventions, and investor demand concentrated around the dollar. For many years prior to 2026, USD-denominated tokens represented the majority share of on-chain stablecoin capital; the emergence of non-USD variants—pegged to EUR, GBP, JPY, and commodity or basket pegs—had been incremental until the last two quarters. The shift recorded in February 2026 does not negate dollar dominance but indicates meaningful diversification among users and issuers who are experimenting with localized peg products and alternative rails.
Regulatory context is a critical backdrop. Several jurisdictions introduced clearer frameworks for tokenized fiat and e-money between 2023 and 2025, lowering barriers to issuance for non-USD stablecoins in certain markets. That regulatory progress—combined with improved on-chain settlement tooling—appears to have catalyzed issuance and transfers in specific corridors, a dynamic the Visa and Dune report captures in its aggregated metrics. Investors should therefore treat the $1.1 billion figure not as an isolated anomaly but as an inflection point driven by both market demand and incremental policy clarity.
Data Deep Dive
The two headline data points from the Visa and Dune report are precise: a non-USD stablecoin supply of $1.1 billion in February 2026, and aggregated on-chain transfer volume rising more than 1,600% relative to the prior comparable period (Visa & Dune report, Feb 2026; The Block, Mar 25, 2026). The report's temporal anchoring—February data published in March—means the growth window captures early-2026 issuance and settlement activity. The transfer-volume metric suggests usage beyond simple holding; high turnover indicates transaction utility: remittances, cross-border merchant settlements, or even inter-exchange liquidity provisioning for localized fiat pairs.
Where the growth is occurring matters. Visa and Dune datasets point to pockets of concentration: European and Asia-Pacific chains show disproportionate adoption of EUR- and JPY-pegged tokens, while emerging-market corridors are experimenting with basket-pegged and commodity-backed stablecoins for trade finance and import payments. The report's chain-level analytics imply that a small set of regional issuer programs and payment integrators accounted for the lion's share of the February surge. That concentration presents both an opportunity for scale and a single-point-of-failure risk if issuers face redemption stress or regulatory intervention.
Comparative analysis is instructive. While non-USD stablecoins' $1.1 billion supply is small relative to legacy USD stablecoins, the growth rate—over 1,600% in transfer volume—contrasts sharply with the low-to-single-digit transfer growth in major USD fiat tokens during the same period, according to on-chain indicators cited in the report. That disparity hints at nascent product-market fit in specific use cases rather than broad-based substitution of dollar-denominated tokens. As a result, the data should be read as evidence of niche adoption gaining pace rather than wholesale disintermediation of USD dominance.
Sector Implications
Payments and remittances stand to be the immediate beneficiaries if the patterns identified by Visa and Dune persist. Non-USD stablecoins can reduce FX friction when both payer and payee prefer settlement in a non-dollar currency, lowering conversion steps and potentially compressing the time-to-settlement to near-instant on-chain finality. For corporates operating in multi-currency supply chains, tokenized local currency settlements could materially change working capital needs, provided counterparties accept on-chain settlement and custody interfaces integrate with treasury systems.
Banks and regulated payment providers will evaluate whether to embed non-USD stablecoin rails into their commercial offerings or to offer custodial and settlement services around tokenized local currency. The Visa report itself—given Visa's role in payments—signals that major incumbents are monitoring these developments and contemplating productization. That raises questions about partnership models: will incumbent rails wrap existing token liquidity, or will pure-play crypto-native networks capture market share in targeted corridors?
For token issuers and market infrastructure, the February numbers imply a path to scale but also to scrutiny. Issuance economics for non-USD stablecoins will need to account for liquidity provisioning, prudent reserve management in multiple fiat currencies, and compliance with multiple regulatory regimes. Market makers and custodians must also build bilateral FX risk management into their operational models if they intend to support high-frequency transfer flows denominated in non-USD pegs.
Risk Assessment
Concentration and counterparty risk emerge as primary operational considerations. The Visa and Dune report suggests several issuers and integrators were central to the February transfer spike; if those entities face liquidity strains or regulatory action, on-chain volumes could contract sharply. Unlike mature USD stablecoin markets supported by diversified issuers, the non-USD segment lacks comparable depth, increasing susceptibility to redemption runs or liquidity mismatches.
Regulatory fragmentation poses a second structural risk. Non-USD stablecoins straddle multiple legal regimes: an issuer might be required to hold fiat reserves in one jurisdiction, comply with e-money rules in another, and submit to securities or commodities laws elsewhere. Such fragmentation complicates cross-border settlements and raises compliance costs—especially for institutional participants that must meet AML, KYC, and prudential requirements across jurisdictions.
Operational and market risks include oracle and smart-contract vulnerabilities for algorithmic or basket-pegged constructs, FX volatility in reserve assets not perfectly matched to the peg, and custodial failure modes for underlying fiat reserves. Each risk vector is magnified when transfer volumes expand rapidly, as velocity increases strain on liquidity infrastructure and reconciliation processes.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital views the February 2026 datapoints as an early-stage market signal rather than a paradigm shift. The $1.1 billion supply and >1,600% transfer increase confirm product-market experiments are yielding traction in discrete corridors, but the absolute scale remains modest versus the larger USD-denominated stablecoin ecosystem. Our contrarian read is that non-USD stablecoins are more likely to succeed as complementary instruments embedded into existing FX and treasury workflows than as direct substitutes for dollar-denominated tokens.
Practically, the most sustainable use cases will be those where on-chain settlement resolves a specific pain point—cross-border payroll, multi-currency supplier payments, or digital trade finance—rather than speculative trading. Firms that build two capabilities will capture disproportionate value: first, localized liquidity depth (market-making and reserve architecture) and second, robust compliance and custodial wrappers that mirror regulated banking relationships. Investors should therefore separate issuer-credit risk from network-utility risk: a well-structured issuer with conservative reserves and strong custodial partnerships can underpin network utility even if token market depth is initially limited.
Finally, Fazen Capital expects incumbent financial intermediaries to adopt a pragmatic stance. Rather than an existential threat, tokenized non-USD settlement rails present a potential source of fee revenue, new product issuance, and client retention if integrated thoughtfully. We recommend market participants track on-chain metrics month-over-month and stress-test treasury operations for counterparty and FX scenarios tied to multi-currency reserve holdings. For further reading on tokenized payments and treasury implications see our ongoing research at [Stablecoins](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and [Payments](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Bottom Line
Non-USD stablecoins' $1.1 billion supply and >1,600% transfer-volume surge in February 2026 signal targeted, high-velocity adoption in specific corridors rather than immediate displacement of USD dominance. Institutional stakeholders should monitor issuer resilience, regulatory clarity, and corridor-specific liquidity as leading indicators of whether niche adoption will scale.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
