Bank of Italy Governor Fabio Panetta told the country’s banking association on Wednesday that commercial banks must convert their money into digital tokens to remain competitive as stablecoins gain momentum, backed by what he described as strong support from the United States administration.

According to Reuters, the European Central Bank policymaker’s comments come as European officials debate how to preserve the continent’s monetary sovereignty while American policymakers accelerate efforts to establish dollar-backed digital assets as a global payment standard.

Addressing bankers in Milan, Panetta said traditional money would continue to anchor the financial system, but warned that both central bank and commercial bank money must become fully digital.

“I expect commercial bank money will also become mostly tokenised,” he stated, referring to the process of converting financial assets into digital tokens issued on distributed ledgers such as blockchain.

Source: Bloomberg

Panetta acknowledged that stablecoin use would grow substantially in line with Washington’s strategic priorities.

“They’ll definitely develop because there’s a big push by the U.S. administration,” he said, explaining that American officials view digital assets as tools to reinforce global dollar demand.

The governor emphasized uncertainty around stablecoins’ ultimate role but insisted they would not displace traditional money, which he called the financial system’s only stable anchor.

“It’s not clear what role they’ll have … but I expect the system will remain centred around central bank and commercial bank money, both of which will need to become digital,” Panetta added during his address to Italy’s banking leaders.

His warning arrives amid escalating European concerns about dollar-denominated stablecoins controlling 99.58% of the $300 billion global market while euro-backed alternatives remain marginal at just $680 million.

Source: DefiLlama

The ECB has repeatedly flagged systemic risks from rapid stablecoin growth, particularly as leading issuers now rank among the world’s largest U.S. Treasury holders, creating potential spillover effects into traditional markets during stress events.

The ECB seeks to launch a digital euro by 2029 to maintain the relevance of central bank money in an increasingly digital economy and to protect Europe’s monetary sovereignty.

Panetta noted recent geopolitical developments showed Europe’s risky dependence on American firms like Visa, Mastercard, and PayPal for over two-thirds of its payments.

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