A look at the new SEC-registered, yield-bearing stablecoin

The new offering debuts amid recent reports that stablecoins could lead to more TradFi-DeFi overlap

article-image

Figure CEO Mike Cagney | Ben Solomon Photo LLC for Blockworks

share


This is a segment from the Forward Guidance newsletter. To read full editions, subscribe.


There’s a new stablecoin on the block. 

Figure Markets is calling its new offering the first SEC-registered public security USD stablecoin native to a blockchain.

Called YLDS, it pays an interest rate of secured overnight financing rate (SOFR) minus 0.50%. Users can transfer the securities peer-to-peer via the Provenance blockchain using Figure Markets’ self-custody wallets.

It was roughly a year ago that I caught up with Figure CEO Mike Cagney at Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit in London. He told me then — following a $60 million raise — that his company was working toward having a registered security alternative to stablecoins that would pay a yield. There was this filing from October 2023.

So here we are. 

The launch comes about a month after stablecoin issuer Circle acquired Hashnote, a company that created the largest tokenized money market fund.

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire noted the demand for market participants using yield-bearing collateral, while also being able to easily convert it to tokenized cash (referring to USDC).

Stablecoins have been called crypto’s killer app and a payments space disruptor.

Andrew O’Neill, digital assets managing director at S&P Global Ratings, noted in a recent report that stablecoins could lead to more TradFi-DeFi overlap — like in the case of cross-border payments, the tokenization of real-world assets (RWA) or digital bonds issuance.

Stablecoins’ market capitalization stands at nearly $222 billion; there are roughly 149 million stablecoin holders, according to rwa.xyz data. Onchain RWAs amount to about $17.5 billion.   

“The lack of a consensus about the tools that should be used to bring money natively onchain is among the main factors that hinder the development of digital bonds and RWA tokenization.”

We’re keeping an eye out for stablecoin legislation in the US, as S&P Global analysts expect regulation to bolster the category’s adoption. 

To that point, they forecast a number of users to “transition progressively” from unregulated to regulated stablecoins. So perhaps Figure is on to something.


Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters:

Tags

Upcoming Events

Old Billingsgate

Mon - Wed, October 13 - 15, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

recent research

Research

article-image

The labor market is screaming weakness, but inflation is set to head higher

article-image

Roman Storm was found guilty in a case experts say criminalizes non-custodial code

article-image

Scenius Capital also announced that ParaFi took a strategic GP stake

article-image

Crypto is still on a mission — and still needs users

article-image

After its first phone drew jeers from a popular tech YouTuber, Solana Mobile delivered on its newest device

article-image

Markets strongly suspect that committee members will make the first interest rate cut of 2025