Interactive Brokers Group, an American multinational brokerage firm, is considering issuing a stablecoin for its customers, joining a growing number of major financial institutions looking to capitalise on the digital token boom as the US relaxes crypto regulations.
The deliberations come as the global financial system undergoes a rare transformation, driven by the rise of blockchain-based assets such as stablecoins.
These tokens, typically pegged to fiat currencies, are being used to facilitate borderless transactions without engaging with traditional banking systems.
In an interview with Reuters, Interactive Brokers’ billionaire founder, Thomas Peterffy, revealed that the company is exploring the possibility of launching a stablecoin but has yet to finalise how it would be rolled out to customers.
Interactive Brokers, valued at approximately US$110 billion, is one of the world’s leading discount brokerages.
It currently collaborates with crypto platform Paxos and is also an investor in the crypto exchange Zero Hash.
Through these partnerships, the firm offers cryptocurrency trading services to its clients.
The company is now developing capabilities for instant, round-the-clock stablecoin funding of brokerage accounts and support for asset transfers involving popular cryptocurrencies.
However, Peterffy expressed a degree of scepticism about crypto’s long-term fundamentals:

“It’s basically hard to grasp its fundamental value. If we see people adopting it and ascribing a value to it, I’m okay with that, but I’m still not convinced.”
One potential approach would see Interactive Brokers allow customers to use stablecoins issued by other financial institutions to fund their accounts, depending on the credibility of the issuer.
While stablecoins offer efficiency and ease of cross-border transactions, critics argue they could be exploited by criminals seeking to circumvent anti-money laundering checks imposed by banks.
Rival brokerage Robinhood recently launched a US dollar-pegged stablecoin, USDG, through a consortium that includes crypto firms like Kraken and Galaxy Digital.
The network, called the Global Dollar Network, uses Paxos as the issuer of USDG.
Interactive Brokers also launched a predictions market last year called ForecastEx, where investors can buy “yes” or “no” contracts based on specific outcomes.
The firm now manages around 3.87 million customer accounts as of end-June, marking a 32% year-on-year increase.
Amid ongoing market volatility, exacerbated by US tariff policies, Interactive Brokers has seen elevated trading activity.
Its share price has climbed around 47% since the start of the year, outperforming the S&P 500 Investment Banking & Brokerage index, which has risen roughly 20% in the same period.
“We view the two innovations (prediction markets and crypto investments) as an effective hedge to any disruption in the firm’s core equity, futures, and derivatives businesses,”
Morningstar analysts noted.
Featured image credit: Edited by Fintech News Switzerland, based on image by CoinWire Japan via Unsplash
This article first appeared on Fintech News America