Vitalik jumps on the de-dollarization trend in radical non-USD stablecoin proposal

- Vitalik Buterin proposed replacing dollar-pegged stablecoins with personalized baskets of prediction market shares tailored to each user’s spending patterns,
- Buterin argues that no single currency should serve as crypto’s stability anchor.
- Global de-dollarization is being accelerated through BRICS local currency agreements and declining dollar reserve holdings.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has reposted an earlier proposal he made to ditch the U.S. dollar as the default reference point for stablecoins. He suggests that users hold personalized baskets of prediction market shares tied to their own spending patterns instead.
The proposal by Vitalik follows a trend where more countries are choosing to conduct their trades in non-dollar settlement alternatives. These alternatives have ranged from TradFi proposals such as BRICS currencies to decentralized finance experiments.
What did Vitalik Buterin propose?
Vitalik Buterin recently reposted an idea he first outlined months earlier on the social media platform X in a longer essay about the future of prediction markets.
Buterin’s central question is simple: “If we’re making a synthetic stable, what should it really be stable WITH RESPECT TO?”
His answer involves the use of a local large language model (LLM) on each user’s device that would analyze that person’s spending habits and assemble a custom basket of prediction market positions representing a set number of days of expected future expenses.
Wealth growth would come from holding stocks, ETH, or other assets, while stability would come from the personalized basket.
The proposal also requires that prediction markets be denominated in assets people actually want to hold, whether that is interest-bearing traditional currencies, wrapped equities, or ETH. Buterin argued that non-interest-bearing currencies carry opportunity costs that are too high to serve as the base layer.
Buterin has been vocal about the risks of dollar dependence for months. In January, he said that pegging stablecoins to the dollar ties supposedly decentralized systems to a single national currency’s monetary policy and geopolitical exposure. Over long time horizons, even moderate inflation could erode usefulness, he argued.
Regarding oracle design, Buterin stated that systems governed primarily by token ownership lack natural defenses and must charge their users significant fees to make attacks uneconomical. Blockchains rely on oracle systems to access external price data. If those oracles can be captured by well-funded actors, the entire protocol becomes vulnerable.
His third issue was that when stablecoins use staked ETH as collateral, the yield earned by locked collateral competes with what stablecoin users could earn elsewhere.
What are the other alternatives to the dollar?
J.P. Morgan’s global macro research shows that a growing number of energy contracts in commodity markets are being priced in currencies other than the dollar. Central bank reserves held in dollars have also declined over the past two decades.
The Center for International Relations and Sustainable Development reports that Russia now conducts roughly a third of its trade in Chinese yuan. Brazil and China agreed in 2023 to settle trade directly between the real and the yuan, and India purchased a million barrels of oil in rupees that same year.
90% of foreign exchange transactions and 48% of SWIFT payments are still done in dollars, and most crypto users prefer to use dollar-pegged stablecoins for payments and savings. Tether’s USDT accounts for roughly $186.8 billion in circulation, which is more than 60% of the total stablecoin supply.
The available decentralized alternatives like Ethena’s USDe and Sky Dollar each account for around $6.3 billion, while Dai has contracted to approximately $4.5 billion.
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FAQs
What did Vitalik Buterin propose as an alternative to USD stablecoins?
Buterin proposed that users hold personalized baskets of prediction market shares, assembled by local AI models based on each person's expected future expenses, rather than pegging stablecoins to the U.S. dollar.
Why does Buterin think stablecoins should stop tracking the dollar?
He has argued that tying decentralized systems to a single national currency exposes them to that country's monetary policy and geopolitical risks, and that even moderate inflation over long time horizons could erode a dollar peg's usefulness.
How big is the current stablecoin market compared to decentralized alternatives?
Centralized dollar-backed stablecoins dominate: Tether's USDT alone holds roughly $186.8 billion in circulation, while the largest decentralized options (Ethena's USDe, Sky Dollar, and Dai) each sit between $4.5 billion and $6.3 billion, according to DefiLlama data.
Disclaimer. The information provided is not trading advice. Cryptopolitan.com holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

Hannah Collymore
Hannah is a writer and editor with nearly a decade of blog writing and event reporting experience in the crypto space. At Cryptopolitan, Hannah contributes to the news page, reporting and analyzing the latest developments in DeFi, RWA, crypto regulation, AI and frontier tech industries. She graduated from Arcadia university with a degree in Business Administration.
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