Japan’s Three Megabanks Plan Joint Stablecoin Issuance in Fiscal 2026
On June 9, according to Odaily citing Nikkei, MUFG Bank, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, and Mizuho Bank are planning to jointly issue fiat-pegged stablecoins during Japan’s fiscal year 2026. The report said the three banks will establish a dedicated discussion group to study practical business use cases and operating mechanisms, with a basic agreement expected soon.
Based on the information disclosed so far, the plan is still in the preparation stage. The three banks have not yet released a full joint issuance framework. Key details remain unclear, including whether the stablecoin will target retail or institutional users, what settlement network it will use, whether it will support cross-border payments, and how reserves, custody, and redemption mechanisms will be structured.
The core signal is that Japan’s leading banking system is attempting to move stablecoins beyond isolated pilot projects and toward joint issuance and business-level coordination.
The report also mentioned that the three megabanks have been conducting pilot tests related to joint stablecoin issuance with support from Japan’s Financial Services Agency since “November 2025.” However, this timeline appears somewhat unclear when compared with the current issuance plan. Different sources may describe the schedule differently, and the information still requires official confirmation.
Without cross-verification from bank announcements or regulatory documents, the market may be better served by viewing the news as a high-level signal of bank-led stablecoin progress, rather than a finalized issuance decision.
In the current market context, the involvement of Japan’s three megabanks fits the broader global trend of banks and asset managers accelerating their move into tokenized deposits, stablecoins, and on-chain payment infrastructure. Stablecoins are no longer only liquidity tools for crypto trading pairs. They are increasingly entering traditional finance use cases such as clearing, corporate treasury management, and cross-border payments.
If the project takes shape, Japan’s banking system may move much faster in compliant local stablecoins than it did during the earlier phase of fragmented pilot programs.
Why It Matters
This news matters because the participants are not a single crypto company or payment startup. They are three systemically important Japanese banks. A joint fiat-pegged stablecoin issued by major banks would suggest that stablecoin competition is expanding from crypto-native issuance to the digitization of bank liabilities and the restructuring of payment and settlement infrastructure.
For the Asian market, this is closer to an institutional-level trial than a normal partnership announcement.
Another key point is regulatory coordination. If Japan’s Financial Services Agency is indeed supporting the pilot, it would indicate that bank-led stablecoins are not a marginal experiment in Japan, but a financial infrastructure initiative being advanced within a compliance framework.
However, the available public information is still not enough to determine whether the final product will be a tokenized deposit, a narrow stablecoin, or a settlement tool designed for specific use cases.
WEEX View
The core question is not whether the banks can issue a stablecoin, but which part of the payment and settlement market they are trying to capture once it is issued.
If Japan’s three megabanks move forward together, they will effectively bring local banking standards, settlement channels, and ledger interfaces to the same negotiating table. This could directly affect the future design of exchange fiat on- and off-ramps, OTC settlement, corporate treasury migration to blockchain-based rails, and cross-border dollar-yen liquidity flows.
For front-line CEX businesses, the real impact is not the concept itself. The key question is whether this type of bank-led stablecoin can eventually enter fiat gateways, market maker settlement processes, or even become an intermediary layer for OTC capital flows. Once bank credit support is combined with local regulatory approval, some low-risk settlement demand currently served by offshore stablecoins could be redirected.
The second layer of conflict lies in product design. Banks want stablecoins to become a controllable extension of their liabilities, while the crypto market needs liquid assets that can move freely across platforms, settle quickly, and enter trading pools. These two models naturally create a firewall. Banks tend to prefer whitelisted users, limited use cases, and strict KYC, while exchanges and market makers care more about accessibility, settlement speed, and arbitrage boundaries.
If the final product is a closed, consortium-chain-based, or institution-only stablecoin, its direct contribution to secondary-market liquidity may be limited. However, it could still reshape the entry structure for traditional finance, bringing some institutional capital on-chain through regulated rails first before any liquidity spills over into public crypto markets.
The next things to watch are the hard parameters, not just the phrase “joint issuance.” The market needs to know who the issuer will be, how reserves will be held, whether redemption will be T+0, whether the stablecoin can circulate across banks and borders, and whether it will connect with existing payment networks or trading platforms.
Until these details are disclosed, it will remain difficult to determine whether the project is mainly an internal banking efficiency tool or a development that could materially affect the stablecoin landscape, exchange fiat businesses, and regional arbitrage networks.
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