FATF Names Stablecoins the Top On-Chain Illicit-Activity Vector, Citing Tether
Crypto News
The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) released its seventh progress report on virtual-asset supervision on July 16, revealing that 83% of the 109 jurisdictions surveyed — 91 in total — have now legislated the Travel Rule, the requirement that virtual-asset service providers (VASPs) transmit originator and beneficiary data alongside every transfer. That figure is up sharply from 73% a year earlier, and climbs to 93% once 11 jurisdictions with pending legislation are counted. Our reading of the filing is that adoption is broadening faster than enforcement: the share of regimes rated ‘largely compliant’ rose only modestly, from 29% to 34%, leaving most jurisdictions with rules on the books but limited supervisory teeth to enforce them.
The report’s sharpest warning concerns stablecoins, which FATF now identifies as carrying the largest share of identified on-chain illicit activity — a marked deterioration from its 2025 assessment. According to the official filing, laundering channels tied to North Korean (DPRK) actors, terrorist-financing networks and cross-border drug-trafficking syndicates are all expanding their use of dollar-pegged tokens. The finding lands squarely on Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USDC, the two issuers that dominate global stablecoin supply. For a market already gripped by extreme fear, designating stablecoins as the leading vehicle for illicit flows sharpens the regulatory spotlight on the very segment that underpins most crypto trading liquidity.
FATF also flagged a newer and more troubling pattern: certain criminal organizations have begun engineering bespoke ‘freeze-resistant’ stablecoins, purpose-built to evade the address-blacklisting and asset-seizure controls that centralized issuers such as Circle and Tether enforce. The implication, the filing states, is that relying on issuer-level blacklists alone can no longer cover the full stablecoin laundering surface. That shifts part of the compliance burden away from compliant issuers and toward the harder problem of detecting purpose-built evasion tokens. Not unlike the mechanics behind some algorithmic stablecoins, these instruments are designed so no single administrator can reverse or halt a suspect transaction.
Decentralized finance remains the report’s largest structural blind spot. Only 18% of the 109 jurisdictions surveyed have completed a DeFi-specific risk assessment, with a further 9% in progress — meaning close to three-quarters of the world’s regulators still have no framework for the sector. Offshore VASPs and DeFi platforms were singled out as the principal supervisory gaps. Protocols spanning lending venues like Aave and decentralized-exchange infrastructure such as 0x, alongside newer venues like Aerodrome Finance, largely operate beyond the Travel Rule’s reach. FATF urged jurisdictions to accelerate substantive implementation of Recommendation 15, its core anti-money-laundering standard for virtual assets, rather than stopping at legislation.
Regulatory pressure is building on the demand side too. A European Central Bank board member, Piero Cipollone, warned on July 17 that the growing popularity of stablecoins threatens Europe’s banking system by pulling retail deposits out of commercial banks. Speaking to Italian cooperative banks in Rome, he argued that the trend compounds strain already imposed by mobile-payment platforms, which have eroded lenders’ payment revenue and customer data. If households increasingly hold funds in stablecoin wallets rather than bank accounts, he cautioned, banks would need to replace that funding with costlier wholesale borrowing — potentially pushing up lending rates across the wider economy. His proposed remedy is the digital euro.
Cipollone tied the deposit risk to Europe’s dependence on foreign payment rails: roughly two-thirds of card transactions in the euro area are processed over non-European networks, and 13 of the region’s 21 economies lack a domestic card scheme entirely. Mobile payments already cover more than 10% of point-of-sale transactions in Ireland, the Netherlands and Finland. The concern is amplified because most stablecoin supply — dominated by USDT and USDC — is issued outside the bloc. Under the EU’s MiCA framework, euro-denominated stablecoin issuers must hold at least 30% of reserves as bank deposits, a threshold that rises to 60% for those deemed ‘significant,’ while dollar-pegged tokens sit largely outside direct supervision.
Read together, these developments trace a single arc: regulators on both sides of the Atlantic are converging on stablecoins as the pivotal risk in digital finance — simultaneously the market’s core liquidity layer and, by FATF’s own data, its leading laundering vector. COINOTAG’s aggregate market data underscores the fragility of the backdrop: our Fear & Greed Index reads 25 out of 100, deep in Extreme Fear, while Bitcoin dominance sits at 69.8% and total crypto market capitalization has slipped to about $1.84 trillion. With capital rotating toward Bitcoin and away from the broader altcoin complex, tighter stablecoin oversight arrives at a moment of thin risk appetite — a combination that could weigh on trading liquidity if issuers face heavier compliance demands.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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