COREDO – EU Legal & Compliance Services Expert legal consulting, financial licensing (EMI, PSP, CASP under MiCA), and AML/CFT compliance across the European Union. Headquartered in Prague, we provide seamless regulatory solutions in Germany, Poland, Lithuania, and all 27 EU member states.
I have been running COREDO since 2016, and every year I see entrepreneurs increasingly using stablecoins in corporate payments and cross-border settlements. The speed of settlement, access to global liquidity and predictability of costs look attractive, especially against the backdrop of increasingly complex requirements for international transfers through traditional channels. At the same time, banks are tightening control, regulators are clarifying the frameworks, and business compliance teams are seeking a balance between innovation and reliability.
Logic of stablecoins and banks

Stablecoins: these are digital “cash-like” assets that offer instant settlement and ownership transparency on the blockchain. Banks assess such instruments from a banking risk perspective, because stablecoins and the banking system are connected through common liquidity channels. Issuers hold reserves in banks and money-market instruments, and corporate clients interact with banks when converting and redeeming (redemption).
Regulatory frameworks in Europe and Asia

Regulatory frameworks in Europe and Asia are being formed amid active digitalization of financial markets, but they differ significantly in priorities and supervisory instruments. First we will examine the European approach, MiCA and associated prudential requirements, and then compare them with the practices of Asian regulators.
MiCA: EU prudential requirements
The European regulatory approach to stablecoins relies on MiCA — Markets in Crypto‑Assets — and supervision by the EBA/ECB. MiCA requirements for stablecoin issuers include capital, reserve management, redemption mechanisms, disclosure, reporting and audit. For e‑money tokens the regulator emphasizes redeemability at par and strict segregation of client assets, which effectively brings the model closer to electronic money. Licensing of a stablecoin issuer and the e‑money licence are synchronized with payment licences and e‑money tokens, where AML/CFT procedures and IT infrastructure resilience are important.
Global AML standards in Asia
Crypto-asset regulation in Asia is developing rapidly and in diverse directions. MAS in Singapore emphasizes risk management, including AML/CFT requirements for stablecoin providers and disclosure prospectuses, as well as stress tests. Other regulators in the region are actively engaging on the topic: regulators interested in stablecoins in Asia include central banks and financial supervisors of Hong Kong, Japan and the UAE, which closely monitor reserve models and compliance.
Stablecoin reserves and liquidity

Control over stablecoin reserves and liquidity determines their ability to withstand outflows and maintain the peg in stress scenarios. Next we will examine reserve models and how different approaches to supporting liquidity affect banks and user confidence.
Impact of reserve models on banks
The reserve model for fiat-backed stablecoins focuses on reserve composition: fiat, money market instruments, and government bonds. Reserve composition and liquidity risk go hand in hand: the higher the share of T‑bills and overnight cash, the more resilient a stablecoin’s liquidity is during redemptions. Crypto-collateralized stablecoins and liquidity risks depend on collateral volatility and liquidation mechanisms, while algorithmic stablecoins and seigniorage models increase the risk of de-pegging, which explains why algorithmic stablecoins are more dangerous for banks.
Fractional reserve stablecoin models add maturity transformation and liquidity momentum: investors react to news faster than reserves can be turned into cash. Banks look at how banks assess the liquidity of reserve-backed stablecoins: they analyze the average duration of instruments, issuer limits for bonds, and the credit quality of custodians. Our experience at COREDO has shown: if corporate policy restricts dealings to fiat-backed stablecoins with short reserve durations and transparent reporting, banks view that profile as rational.
Proof of reserves: attestation vs audit
proof-of-reserves and auditor attestations for stablecoins are a key element of trust. Proof‑of‑reserves and auditor attestations confirm the composition of reserves as of a given date, but attestation vs audit for reserves differ in depth: a full audit includes sampling, testing of procedures, and independent verification of ownership rights. A Big Four audit opinion for an issuer raises the trust baseline, although banks also assess the legal framework for custodial storage and asset segregation.
Redemptions and depeg: market behavior
Redemption mechanisms and redemption runs determine how quickly an issuer converts stablecoins into fiat. Temporary suspension mechanisms allow surviving an acute stress phase, but the market closely monitors the frequency and reasons for such decisions. Depegging mechanisms trigger behavioral run models on stablecoins and open contagion channels between stablecoins and banks via reserves and money market flows.
Bank liquidity and settlements

Tokenization of deposits and bank liquidity form an alternative to public stablecoins – banks issue wholesale stablecoins for correspondent banks with settlement within a closed network. Banking and tokenization of deposits reduce settlement risk inside the bank and speed up internal payments, while maintaining a direct link to regulatory capital and LCR/NSFR.
Payments, Treasury and ROI

In corporate practice, effective payments and treasury management directly affects business profitability and key ROI metrics. Developing a payments strategy and properly integrating systems allows reducing costs, accelerating cash turnover, and increasing the transparency of financial results.
Payments Strategy and Integration
Stablecoins in corporate payments bring value where there are frequent cross-border settlements, a distributed supplier network and a need for DvP schemes. Stablecoins and cross-border settlements deliver time savings and improved transaction status transparency, especially during peak hours. How to introduce stablecoins into a company’s treasury: start with a pilot corridor, assess the need for on‑chain payments, then expand by country and counterparty.
Integration of ERP / Treasury with on‑chain payments and ISO 20022 simplifies reconciliation and automation. Methods for assessing the ROI of stablecoin implementation take into account fee savings, cost of capital due to faster collection, reduction in operational time and a decrease in the number of rejected payments. Estimating ROI when introducing stablecoins into payment infrastructure requires clean metrics: integration TCO, provider SLAs and potential penalties for outages.
Compliance AML/CFT KYC Monitoring
Operational Risks: Custody
Best custody practices for institutional use of stablecoins include multisignature and custodial solutions (multisig custody), hot wallet vs cold wallet institutional custody and payment approval flows. Corporate access control and segregation of duties improve governance: one role initiates, a second validates, a third signs. Segregation of client assets and trust models with third‑party custodians reduce counterparty risk, although they do not eliminate it entirely.
de-risking and banking relationships
COREDO Licensing and Architecture
COREDO assists with the registration of legal entities in the EU, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus, Estonia, the United Kingdom, as well as Singapore and Dubai. For projects with stablecoins, EMI/PI licenses in the EU or the equivalent payment institution licenses in the UK are often appropriate, plus VASP registration where the company interacts with crypto assets. In Asia, advice on MAS requirements and local regulators’ requirements for risk management, information security and AML is useful.
Taxes and accounting
tax implications of using stablecoins in international payments depend on the token’s status and the nature of the transaction. Payments for services and goods require a proper invoice base and fixing the exchange rate on the transaction date, and certain jurisdictions apply VAT/GST in specific scenarios. In accounting it is important to determine whether corporate funds can be held in stablecoins safely from a classification standpoint, as cash equivalents when there is strict redeemability and low risk or as financial assets subject to revaluation.
Stress‑tests and resilience plan
Regulatory stress tests for stablecoins are gaining momentum: the FSB and the Basel Committee emphasize assessing run scenarios, the impact on the money market and interaction with banks. Stress testing stablecoin ecosystems in the corporate context is built around three scenarios – a prolonged depeg, a suspension of redemptions and a custodian failure. We model reaction times, available liquidity corridors, loss limits and the steps to switch providers.
How stablecoins affect banks’ interest rate risk management: during mass redemptions issuers sell short-term paper, which can raise yields and increase pressure on the LCR for holders of that paper. A corporate client benefits if it pre-limits exposure to issuers, uses multiple liquidity providers and documents a playbook: who initiates the unwind, who validates the price, which DvP channels are available.
Implementation of stablecoins in corporations
- Define objectives: payment speed, reduced fees, DvP or cash management. Assess methods to evaluate the ROI of implementing stablecoins taking into account the TCO of integration and working capital savings.
- Choose assets and networks: use physically backed (fiat-backed) stablecoins with transparent reserves, avoid experimental algorithmic models.
- Conduct a legal assessment: consider the European regulatory approach to stablecoins (MiCA), the requirements of the FCA/SEC/MAS/FinCEN, as well as local rules in jurisdictions of operation.
- Set up compliance: implement KYC/CDD/EDD, the Travel Rule, on-chain monitoring, sanctions screening and forensic tools; describe the risks of stablecoin operations for corporate clients and the processes to control them.
- Build custody: multisignature, hot/cold separation, segregation of duties, limit policies, cyber-risk insurance and provider SLAs.
- Reserve transparency: collect attestation/audit reports from issuers, retain proof of reserves, monitor regulatory statuses and disclosures.
- Integration: link ERP/TMS, support ISO 20022 tags, set up reconciliation and an event log.
- Banking relationships: prepare a position paper, agree with the bank on acceptable schemes, maintain regular reporting for correspondent banks.
- Resilience plan: describe triggers for depeg, suspension, custodian failures, failover procedures and loss limits.
- Review the strategy: take into account regulatory arbitrage and case law, update policy when new requirements from the EBA/ECB/MAS are released.
How COREDO reduces implementation risk
When a client comes to us with a request for stablecoins and cross-border payments, I assemble a cross-functional team: licensing, AML, tax, banking relationships and information security. The COREDO team implemented: registration of a holding in the EU, setup of VASP contours in Estonia, selection of a custodian with a segregated trust model, preparation of an AML package for the bank and building relationships with on-chain monitoring providers. This approach gave the client a fast pilot launch and subsequent scale into Asia through Singapore.
Conclusions
Stablecoins have taken their place in international settlements and corporate treasury. They provide speed and convenience, but at the same time require strict compliance, a thoughtful choice of issuers and mature relationships with banks. EU regulation of stablecoins through MiCA, FATF standards and guidance from Asian regulators create a clear framework in which business can operate predictably.