TLDR
- Billionaire Stanley Druckenmiller predicts stablecoins will underpin global payments within 10–15 years
- He says stablecoins are faster, cheaper, and more efficient than traditional banking infrastructure
- The stablecoin market cap has hit an all-time high of nearly $300 billion
- Druckenmiller remains skeptical of crypto as a store of value, calling it “a solution looking for a problem”
- The GENIUS Act has already prompted Western Union, MoneyGram, and Zelle to announce stablecoin settlement plans
Billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller believes stablecoins will form the backbone of global payments within a decade, though he remains unconvinced that cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin serve any real purpose as a store of value.
LEGENDARY INVESTOR: STABLECOINS COULD RUN GLOBAL PAYMENTS 🤯
Billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller says the real breakthrough in crypto are the stablecoins and blockchain rails underneath them.
Druckenmiller, one of the most respected macro investors in history, helped… pic.twitter.com/9iP8B68WYf
— CryptosRus (@CryptosR_Us) March 14, 2026
Druckenmiller made the comments in an interview with Morgan Stanley, recorded January 30–31 and released this week. He spoke during a word-association segment about blockchain and digital assets.
“Blockchain and the use of stablecoins — if you want to throw crypto into that — tokens, incredibly useful in terms of productivity,” he said.
“I assume our whole payment systems will be stablecoins in 10 or 15 years — efficient, quicker, cheaper,” he added.
Druckenmiller founded Duquesne Capital Management in 1981 and closed the fund in 2010. Over that period, he averaged 30% annual returns and never had a down year.
His view on stablecoins is not new. Back in May 2021, he told CNBC that blockchain could replace existing US dollar payment rails due to eroding trust in central banks.
“It’s Jerome Powell and the rest of the world, central bankers. There’s a lack of trust,” he said at the time.
The stablecoin market has grown fast. According to data from The Block, the total stablecoin market cap has now reached nearly $300 billion — up more than 440% from around $55 billion five years ago.
Stablecoin Adoption Picks Up Among Traditional Finance Firms
Several major payments companies have moved to embrace stablecoins. Western Union, MoneyGram, and Zelle all announced plans to launch stablecoin settlement systems last year.
Those moves followed the passage of the GENIUS Act in July, which created a clear regulatory framework for payment firms wanting to offer digital asset services.
White House officials have also weighed in. Patrick Witt, executive director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets, said this week that GENIUS Act-compliant stablecoins could drive new deposits into the US banking system by attracting global demand for dollar-denominated assets.
Druckenmiller Still Skeptical on Bitcoin and Crypto as a Store of Value
Despite his enthusiasm for stablecoins, Druckenmiller has long questioned the broader crypto market.
“Crypto? It’s a solution looking for a problem,” he said in the Morgan Stanley interview.
He acknowledged, though, that major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin have built enough of a brand that some investors will continue treating them as stores of value.
In October 2023, Druckenmiller compared Bitcoin to gold and said he preferred gold because it was a “5,000-year-old brand.”
He said he doesn’t currently own any Bitcoin, but added that he probably should.
The stablecoin market cap reaching a new all-time high of nearly $300 billion marks the latest development in the sector’s rapid growth.





