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Today, stablecoins already move real money and power a large share of on-chain settlement. McKinsey puts daily stablecoin transaction volumes at roughly $30 billion, and if that figure is even close to reality, calling stablecoins “experimental” is absurd. Still, mass adoption isn’t here.
Most businesses don’t pay suppliers, run payroll, or process refunds in stablecoins at any real scale. Even with Wyoming’s precedent of launching a state-issued stablecoin, the same question remains: what’s actually blocking adoption if the pipes already exist?
The typical answer would be regulation. But I think it’s only part of it, as the bigger obstacle is accountability and plumbing. When a digital-asset payment goes wrong, who takes the loss? Who can fix it? And who can prove to an auditor that everything was done correctly? So let’s break down what’s still holding stablecoins back from mass adoption, and what an actual way out could look like.
To be honest, the fact that stablecoins are drifting has less to do with businesses not “getting” the technology. They understand the mechanism. The real block is a blurry responsibility model.
In traditional payments, the rules are dull, but dependable: who can reverse what, who investigates disputes, who is liable for mistakes, and what evidence satisfies auditors. With stablecoins, that clarity often disappears once the transaction leaves your system. And that’s where most pilots fail.
A finance team can’t run on guesswork about whether money arrives, whether it gets stuck, or whether it comes back as a compliance problem three weeks later. If funds go to the wrong address or a wallet is compromised, someone has to own the result.
In bank transfers, that ownership is defined. With stablecoins, too much is still negotiated case by case between the sender, the payment provider, the wallet service, and sometimes an exchange on one side. Everyone has a role, yet no one is truly accountable — and that’s how risk spreads.
Regulation is supposed to solve this, but it’s not fully there yet. The market is getting more guidance, especially in the U.S., where the OCC’s letter #1188 has clarified that banks can engage in certain crypto-related activities like custody and “riskless principal” transactions. That helps, but it doesn’t solve the daily operating questions.
As a result, permission doesn’t automatically create a clean model for disputes, checks, evidence, and liability. It still has to be built into the product and spelled out in contracts.
Liability is one part of the limitation. Another one is just as visible: the rails still don’t plug into how companies actually run money. In other words, interoperability is the gap between “you can send the money” and “your business can actually run on it.”
A stablecoin transfer can be fast and final. But that alone doesn’t make it a business payment. Finance teams need every transfer to carry the right reference, match a specific invoice, pass internal approvals and limits, and be transparent. When a stablecoin payment arrives without that structure, someone has to repair it manually, and the “cheap and instant” promise turns into extra work.
That’s where fragmentation silently kills scale. Stablecoin payments don’t arrive as one network. They come as islands — different issuers, different chains, different wallets, different APIs, and different compliance expectations. Even the International Monetary Fund flags payment-system fragmentation as a real risk when interoperability is missing, and the back office feels it first.
All in all, until payments carry standard data end-to-end, plug into ERP and accounting without custom work, and handle exceptions the same way every time, stablecoins won’t scale. But is there something that could make liability and plumbing issues solvable in a way that businesses can actually use?
In my opinion, liability and plumbing become solvable the moment a payment system has two things: a set of rules, and a standard way to plug into existing finance workflows. That’s where Wyoming precedent matters. A state-issued stable token gives the market a governed framework that a business can evaluate, reference in contracts, and defend in front of auditors.
Here’s what that framework opens up for businesses in more detail:
Given the context, stablecoins can’t seamlessly scale on speed and convenience alone. The way I see it, responsibility must be unambiguous, while payments have to fit the tools businesses already use. Wyoming’s case isn’t a panacea. Yet, it underscores that stablecoins should be treated as governed, auditable money, so real-world adoption stops feeling far off.

