When Ethereum first crossed the $1,400 mark in January 2018, the network’s total stablecoin market cap stood at a humble $124,500.

According to DeFiLlama data, as of May 6, 2025, that figure skyrocketed to a massive $124.5 billion, marking a one-million-fold increase.

Source: DeFiLlama

This rapid rise has not occurred in isolation. Ethereum’s stablecoin market is now the dominant layer for digital dollar liquidity, with Tether (USDT) leading the charge at 52% market dominance, accounting for $64.7 billion of the current $124.5 billion total.

USD Coin (USDC) follows at $37 billion, trailed by Ethena’s USDe at $4.5 billion. Other major contenders include Sky Dollar’s USDs ($3.8 billion), DAI ($3.6 billion), BlackRock’s BUIDL, Ethena’s USDtb, FDUSD, USDO, and PayPal’s PYUSD.

Despite a minor weekly drop of 0.08%, around $100 million, the ecosystem remains highly active.

Ethereum is trading at $1,804, up 10.9% in two weeks. Its market cap is $216 billion, and its daily trading volume is $9.2 billion.

Source: Cryptonews

This growth comes as the blockchain gears up for a pivotal upgrade this month, which includes EIP-7251. The change will substantially increase the maximum stake from 32 ETH to 2,048 ETH, potentially transforming validator operations, increasing decentralization, and improving overall on-chain efficiency.

Stablecoin Market Matures: Institutions, Regulations, and Adoption Fuel Growth

The total stablecoin market now stands at nearly $240 billion globally, close to an all-time high. Over $5 billion in new supply was added in the last week of April alone, and year-on-year figures are even more telling.

The #stablecoin market nears $240B all-time high with $5B weekly surge, as Citigroup forecasts $2T by 2030 amid global crypto payment adoption.#Stablecoins #CryptoGrowth https://t.co/NhG8kYtwlK

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) April 29, 2025

Active stablecoin wallets jumped from 19.6 million in February 2024 to 30 million by February 2025, a 53% increase. Supply also soared from $138 billion to $225 billion during the same period.

Additionally, Tether continues to dominate, with over 61% of the global market share. Yet the increasing presence of alternatives like USDC, USDe, and DAI reveals a maturing ecosystem.

A convergence of institutional interest, technological progress, and political will is also reshaping the regulatory terrain. Citi now projects stablecoins could surpass $2 trillion in market cap by 2030, and in its optimistic outlook, that number balloons to $3.7 trillion.

Citigroup has projected a rise in stablecoin market, forecasting its total market cap to soar from $240 billion to $2 trillion by 2030. #Stablecoin #Citigrouphttps://t.co/tGNT3XfNC0

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) April 25, 2025

Mastercard has emerged as a surprising champion of stablecoins. The company recently unveiled a comprehensive framework that allows 150 million merchants to accept digital dollars through a “360-degree” strategy.

Mastercard announced its partnership with payments processor Nuvei, Circle and Paxos to enable a seamless stablecoin payment ecosystem.#Mastercard #Stablecoin #OKXCardhttps://t.co/VyzaH9fRyY

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) April 29, 2025

Collaborating with payment processors like Nuvei and stablecoin issuers Circle and Paxos, Mastercard has developed infrastructure that supports wallets, card issuance, on-chain remittances, and instant merchant settlement.

Another payments giant, Stripe, is entering the fray with its own USD-backed stablecoin to expand payments beyond North America and Europe.

Ethereum’s Hidden Triumph: Powering Trillions Amid Market Lulls

While price headlines have often painted a bearish picture, Ethereum was reportedly down 45% in Q1 2025; the underlying metrics tell a different story.

Bitwise’s Q1 report dubbed it “The Best Worst Quarter in Crypto’s History.” In Q1 alone, stablecoins settled a record $27.6 trillion on-chain, surpassing Visa’s 2023 settlement volume of $12 trillion. Interestingly, Ethereum is the settlement layer for most of this activity.

Stablecoins settle $27.6 trillion in Q1 2025, doubling Visa’s annual volume, as Ethereum’s infrastructure dominates global digital payments, even amid price turbulence.#Stablecoins #Ethereumhttps://t.co/LVFclqLGPX

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) April 18, 2025

Ethereum’s infrastructure has become more scalable with the rise of Layer 2 solutions like Base, Arbitrum, and Optimism. These networks offer sub-cent transaction fees and have absorbed a large transaction volume from the Ethereum mainnet.

Ethereum’s median fees were just $0.66, making it competitive even at scale, but developer activity remains unmatched as Ethereum still has the highest average developer count in the industry.

Q1 2025 also witnessed profound political and institutional alignment with crypto. Following the inauguration of a pro-crypto U.S. president, digital assets were named a national strategic priority.

Executive orders followed, including forming a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and rollbacks of restrictive guidance like SAB 121. Banks received permission to custody crypto assets, and lawsuits by the SEC were dropped, reversing the earlier “Operation Choke Point 2.0.”

@coinbase has uncovered @FDICgov documents revealing efforts to halt crypto banking activities, exposing a systematic push against the industry.#Coinbase #FDIChttps://t.co/Wr6DByXffC

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) January 3, 2025

Yet, through all this, Ethereum’s real strength wasn’t in its token price and function. It remained the go-to chain for DeFi, payments, and smart contract innovation.

Even as other chains like Solana showed momentary bursts in revenue or user growth, Ethereum’s foundation remained unshaken, spanning everything from Uniswap’s $1.03 billion in revenue to rollup adoption.

The rise of stablecoins has put Ethereum at the epicenter of a massive financial transformation. What was once a speculative network for ICOs is now powering trillions in global settlement value.

The post Ethereum Stablecoin Market Explodes 1M-Fold to $124B – What’s Driving It? appeared first on Cryptonews.

Author