Andreessen Horowitz’s crypto arm says the word “stablecoin” has become a relic of crypto’s volatile early years. The label, the firm argued, will fall out of use as digital dollars settle into mainstream finance.
The firm argued that stability has stopped being the category’s defining feature. The technology has outgrown its original name. It now sits at the center of a global payment system.
Stability is the floor, not the feature
In a post published this week, a16z compared “stablecoin” to “horsepower.” Useful when explaining a new machine through a familiar one, then outdated, then stuck.
The original problem was simple. Wild crypto volatility kept the technology unusable for everyday savings, lending, or payments. Stability solved that. It is now a prerequisite, not the product.
Stablecoins today .
Stablecoin supply has climbed past $300 billion. Corporations are treating dollar-pegged tokens as a payments rail rather than a crypto trading tool.
“Stability is now table stakes. It’s a prerequisite, and not the point,” read an excerpt in the post.
What Replaces “Stablecoin”
a16z expects the category to be renamed quietly. The firm pointed to “digital dollars,” “digital euros,” and “on-chain assets” as alternatives.
Each label, it said, more accurately describes how users will engage with the asset.
The deeper change, it said, is that money now behaves like software, programmable and embedded directly into consumer applications.
The argument lands as the , Circle, and Western Union are already building infrastructure around the asset class.
The name, a16z said, may matter less than what comes after it. Whether “digital dollar” replaces the term or it simply fades into ordinary finance, the firm expects users to keep transacting either way.
