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Asset Manager Van Eck Says Stablecoins Should Be Treated as Investment Funds, Not Banks

Jan van Eck, the firm's CEO, argues against the position of government officials.

Updated May 11, 2023, 3:45 p.m. Published Feb 11, 2022, 12:58 a.m.
Jan van Eck, president and CEO of VanEck (CoinDesk archives)
Jan van Eck, president and CEO of VanEck (CoinDesk archives)

Stablecoins should be treated like investment products, not banks, Jan van Eck, the CEO of investment firm VanEck, wrote in a Barron’s op-ed on Wednesday.

“They don’t lend money, so I don’t understand why there is a push to regulate them like banks. Bank regulation may in fact imply some sort of government guarantee,” he wrote.

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Van Eck’s broadside followed two weeks after Nellie Liang, the Treasury Undersecretary for Domestic Finance, testified before Congress that stablecoins “are bank-like products … as well as an investment-like product, which is why there was a regulatory gap.” A group of regulators called the President’s Working Group for Financial Markets published a report last year recommending that stablecoins fall under the same regulations as banks.

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In her testimony, Liang said that technology companies without bank licensing shouldn't offer stablecoins.

Van Eck criticized the Working Group report for not seeing the similarities between stablecoins and money-market funds.

“Despite the similarity that stablecoins have with money market funds, the PWG suggested that stablecoin issuers be “insured depository institutions.” Stablecoins invest in securities; they don’t lend like banks do,” van Eck wrote.

He made two recommendations for a potential, stablecoin regulatory framework.

First, he suggested that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission oversee stablecoins for a four-year trial period similar to how it considers investment funds under the Investment Company Act of 1940.

Second, van Eck recommended not forcing tax withholdings on stablecoins in the future. That move would give stablecoins an opportunity to prove their value in the U.S. “Most stablecoins currently don’t pay dividends,” he wrote. “We need, however, to imagine a day when stablecoins pay interest and plan technologically and regulatorily for that day.”

Jerald David, president of asset management firm Arca, supports van Eck’s first proposal, saying that “stablecoins on the market today resemble more of a ‘40 Act product than a bank,”

"Adding a wrapper and creating a Blockchain Transferred Fund would allow for a U.S. dollar proxy that would be welcomed by the banks and large scale financial institutions,” David wrote in an email to CoinDesk.



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Both Mubadala Investment Company and Al Warda Investments lifted investments in BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin ETF (IBIT) in the fourth quarter.

What to know:

  • Two major Abu Dhabi investment firms, Mubadala Investment Company and Al Warda Investments, increased their holdings of BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) in the fourth quarter of 2025 as bitcoin’s price fell.
  • Mubadala lifted its IBIT stake to 12.7 million shares and Al Warda to 8.2 million shares.
  • Together, they held a combined position that exceeded $1 billion at the end of 2025 but has since declined to just over $800 million amid further bitcoin losses in 2026.