Everyone is still watching TVL, but I think it's 2026 now, and judging stablecoins solely by locked-up volume is outdated.



Recently, I checked out @worldlibertyfi's on-chain data on Solana. What impressed me most wasn't the 855 million supply, but the daily transaction volume of 200 to 300 million. On average, every three days, each USD1 changes hands. This velocity is very real.

Traditional stablecoins are like warehouses—everyone competes to lock in as much as possible; but USD1 is like flowing blood, constantly moving in merchant backends, AI payments, and World Swap. Money only has life when it’s moving.

It partners with BitGo for security, giving the reassurance of old money, and runs extremely fast on Solana. The combination of these two advantages is just right. This is no longer a cold, sterile stablecoin; it’s a truly usable global settlement network.

While it’s performing so well on Solana now, the real test is whether it can naturally expand to other chains. I’m looking forward to seeing how WLFI plays next.

Money locked in is like a specimen; money that moves is the future. The 855 million supply already supports such high activity. If the scale grows further, the entire industry’s definition of stablecoins might need to be rewritten.

What do you think? The next competition for stablecoins is about who can preserve their funds or about who can make money move faster and be used more?

#WLFI USD1 #Solana DeFi #Stablecoin WorldLibertyFinancial
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