Fidelity’s move to introduce a new stablecoin on the Ethereum network has triggered renewed debate about whether major financial institutions are increasingly favoring public blockchains as their core infrastructure. The company recently revealed that its Fidelity Digital Dollar, known as FIDD, will operate on Ethereum and will be backed by cash, cash equivalents, and short-term US Treasury instruments. The stablecoin is structured to support both institutional settlement and retail payment use cases, and it is designed to be transferable to any address on the Ethereum mainnet.
This development stands out because large financial firms have often leaned toward private or privacy-centric blockchain networks when launching on-chain financial products. In contrast, Fidelity selected one of the most established public blockchains. Recent examples show a different pattern among institutions. J.P. Morgan’s blockchain division, Kinexys, previously indicated plans to issue its JPM Coin on the Canton Network, which is publicly accessible but emphasizes privacy features. Similarly, the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation has signaled that it is using the same network to experiment with tokenized US Treasuries, highlighting privacy considerations as a key factor.
Industry observers suggest that regulatory clarity is influencing these infrastructure choices. Marcin Kazmierczak, a co-founder of RedStone, conveyed that Fidelity’s decision represented the opposite of what many would have expected a few years earlier and described it as a strong indication that institutional finance was increasingly treating public blockchains as a standard foundation. He indicated that recent legislation, including the GENIUS Act, had clarified expectations for how stablecoin reserves must be managed and disclosed. In his view, this clarity reduced the appeal of private chains while improving confidence in regulated stablecoins issued on transparent public networks.
Kazmierczak also emphasized that Ethereum’s broad liquidity environment, strong support from major exchanges, and compatibility with Layer 2 scaling solutions created opportunities that private networks could not easily replicate. He pointed to Ethereum’s large total value locked, which exceeds tens of billions of dollars, as evidence of its deep and active ecosystem.
Other market participants interpret Fidelity’s move as a response to where stablecoin usage is already concentrated. Neil Staunton, the chief executive and co-founder of Superset, characterized the development as a pivotal moment in the ongoing comparison between private and public blockchains. He suggested that Fidelity’s choice reflected an understanding of liquidity dynamics rather than a compromise on institutional standards. In his assessment, earlier beliefs that institutions would prefer closed systems had not fully matched real-world needs. He argued that institutions ultimately prioritized functionality, particularly in payments and settlement, where interoperability across platforms is critical. He further indicated that a stablecoin lacking free movement across markets would struggle to fulfill its intended purpose.
Ryne Saxe, a co-founder and chief executive of Eco, expressed a similar perspective. He indicated that Fidelity appeared to want its stablecoin to be widely accessible and used beyond internal accounting. According to his interpretation, this direction implied that open-market liquidity and interoperability would play central roles in the token’s design and use. He also viewed the launch as a notable positive signal for Ethereum’s position in institutional finance.
The broader context for this launch is rapid expansion in the stablecoin sector. Industry data shows that the total market value of stablecoins has climbed above 300 billion dollars, representing a sharp increase from levels seen in early 2025. This growth underscores rising demand for blockchain-based dollar instruments in both trading and payments.
Fidelity has indicated that FIDD is expected to roll out in the coming weeks. The token will be issued through Fidelity Digital Assets, and customers will be able to buy or redeem it at a one-to-one ratio with the US dollar through Fidelity’s crypto platforms. Altogether, the initiative highlights how traditional financial firms are adapting to a landscape where public blockchain networks are playing an increasingly central role.
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