
Stablecoins may need a new public identity as their role expands beyond crypto trading, according to Robert Hackett, head of special projects at a16z crypto.
Summary
- A16z says stablecoins now serve wider payment and finance roles beyond basic price stability.
- Robert Hackett argued the term still reflects crypto’s volatility problem, not today’s broader use.
- The stablecoin name may remain, even as digital dollars and onchain assets gain adoption.
In a May 1 report, Hackett said the word came from crypto’s early years, when builders needed tokens that could hold steady value during sharp market swings.
He said the name once made sense because it explained the main problem these assets solved. However, Hackett argued that the technology has moved past that early use case. He wrote, “Stability is now table stakes. It’s a prerequisite, and not the point.”
Stablecoins move beyond price stability
Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies designed to track assets such as the U.S. dollar, gold, or other reference values. They now support payments, transfers, settlement, savings products, and financial apps built on public blockchains.
Hackett said the term still points to the original problem of crypto volatility, not to the wider platform stablecoins have become. He added that the real question is no longer whether these assets can hold value, but what builders can create with them.
The market has also grown. DefiLlama data showed the total stablecoin market cap near $320.84 billion, with USDT holding about 59.06% dominance. That size has made the sector one of crypto’s main bridges to payments and dollar-based activity.
Rebrand debate grows among builders
John Palmer, a developer and brand adviser, made a similar case last week. He said it “feels like a bug” to call them stablecoins because the category may expand crypto’s use far beyond its current reach.
Palmer also said these assets deserve a self-defined name, rather than one built as a response to volatility. His comments matched Hackett’s view that the word stablecoin frames the technology as a fix, not as a base layer for digital money.
Moreover, Hackett said other terms, such as “digital cash” or “programmable money,” may describe the technology better. Still, he noted that such names can feel too awkward for common use.
He also said early names often remain even after technology changes. As an example, he compared stablecoins with terms such as horsepower and email. In his view, people may later speak more often about digital dollars, digital euros, and other onchain assets.
Elsewhere, the a16z comments came as the firm stays active in wider crypto policy debates. Crypto.news reported that a16z also backed the CFTC in a dispute over state-level restrictions on prediction markets, showing its wider role in digital asset regulation discussions.