Why Latin America needs Local Stablecoins anyway?
In three chapters, I will try to trace the full arc of local stablecoins in Latin America. From the structural gap that dollar-denominated crypto never solved, to the organic adoption already reshaping how people move money, to the infrastructure being built for the next 100 million users.
Latin America has become one of the most dynamic crypto markets on the planet. According to Chainalysis's 2025 Geography of Crypto report, the region recorded nearly $1.5 trillion in cryptocurrency transaction volume between mid-2022 and mid-2025 — with stablecoin activity hitting an all-time high of $87.7 billion in December 2024 alone. In Brazil, Argentina, and Colombia, stablecoins now account for more than half of all exchange purchases.
That number deserves a moment.
$87 billion in a single month. In a region the global financial press spent years treating as a peripheral experiment, not a structural market.
But look more closely at that volume and a different picture emerges. Nearly all of it — the overwhelming majority — flows through USDT and USDC. Dollar-denominated stablecoins: USDC, issued by Circle, a US-based fintech; and USDT, issued by Tether, incorporated in the British Virgin Islands. Both priced in US dollars, both designed around a US financial reality.
This is not an accident. It reflects a genuine problem nobody has fully solved yet: there is no reliable, scalable, on-chain version of the local currency.
The friction nobody asked for: Some practical examples
Here is what moving money on-chain actually looks like for most people in Latin America today. This is The Dollar Trap. Not a metaphor, but a literal operational constraint. If you want to move value on-chain in Latin America, you need to go through USD first. And going back to local currency means friction, fees, and delay every time.
The Gap
The gap between what people need and what exists is clear:
What people need: a way to hold, send, and receive value in their local currency on-chain, programmable, and accessible from anywhere.
What exists: dollar stablecoins. Full stop.
Some will argue that USD stablecoins are the solution — that in inflationary economies, people want dollar exposure anyway. That is partly true. But it ignores entire use cases: merchants who price in local currency, payroll systems, tax obligations, everyday commerce. Not everyone is trying to hedge inflation. Some people are just trying to run a business.
The absence of local currency stablecoins is not a preference. It is a gap in the system, or should I say “in the infrastructure”
The question worth asking
$324 billion in stablecoin volume, and the local currency is still not on-chain at scale.
What changes when it is?
That is the question wFIAT is answering. Not in theory, but in production, across six currencies and four chains. We will look at the data in Part 2.
→ Next: From 2 users to 22,600 in 6 months — what organic adoption actually looks like.
