Stablecoins: Choice of Blockchain


The native token, BSV, is valuable “content” on BSV Blockchain. Yet the hurdles for it to function as everyday cash remain high — regulatory uncertainty, narrative confusion around its purpose, and reputational distortions. After nearly eight years under this symbol, and despite a variety of meaningful applications built onchain, very few have continuously used BSV tokens as “cash.”

In fact, none of these applications require BSV tokens to function as money. The BSV token has operated primarily as a fee-token for data processing — not as circulating consumer cash.

This distinction matters.

What makes BSV Blockchain unique and practical is its capacity as a data infrastructure. With near-zero processing fees, end users do not need to interact with the fee-token at all. Businesses and application providers can provision and manage the necessary tokens behind the scenes. Users experience the service — not the blockchain mechanics.

This architecture enables a globally inclusive economic infrastructure. And within that framework, one of the most powerful “killer applications” is not speculative tokens — but regulated stablecoins, and potentially even CBDCs.

Among the virtually infinite number of blockchains available today, capacity is the differentiator.

All stablecoins must operate on a blockchain. Every transaction requires data processing, and therefore fees. If stablecoins are to function as true “common cash” globally, they must support hundreds of thousands — eventually millions — of transactions per second, seamlessly and affordably.

Whether regulated or not, stablecoins gravitate toward chains that are:

  • Reliable
  • Scalable
  • Low-cost
  • Operationally stable

BSV Blockchain — apart from its unfair and persistent mislabeling — is uniquely positioned in this regard. Its base protocol is stable, without unilateral alteration by a central “chain authority.” Its scalability is engineered at the infrastructure level rather than through layered compromises. And its near-zero network fees allow stablecoin issuers to absorb transaction costs entirely if necessary — enabling true consumer-grade competitiveness.

Once fully regulated, globally adopted stablecoins emerge, infrastructure decisions will become critical. The chosen blockchain must guarantee:

  • Full traceability
  • Clear transaction liability
  • Stable base-layer rules
  • Predictable economic cost structure

In that environment, BSV Blockchain stands not as a speculative instrument, but as foundational infrastructure.

Stablecoins require rails.
 The rails must be stable.
 And the future of digital cash will ultimately choose infrastructure over narrative.