- Fourteen major European banks, including Deutsche Bank and BNP Paribas, oppose the ECB’s digital euro, warning it could harm private payment networks.
- Lawmakers are urging a scaled-back, offline-only version of the digital euro to prevent overlap with existing systems like Wero.
- EU crypto rules under MiCA may favor US stablecoin issuers, strengthening the dollar’s dominance and exposing Europe’s financial vulnerability.
Fourteen of Europe’s leading banks are pushing back against the European Central Bank’s plan for a digital euro. They argue the project could weaken private payment systems ahead of crucial parliamentary discussions in Brussels this week.
Lawmakers are now calling for a scaling back of the initiative, arguing that it lacks clear benefits and risks duplicating market-led innovation. Meanwhile, the EU’s crypto regulation framework may unintentionally advantage US issuers.
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Bank Revolt Challenges Digital Euro Plan
The European Central Bank’s ambition to launch a digital euro by 2029 is encountering growing resistance across the continent.
Fourteen major lenders —including Deutsche Bank, BNP Paribas, and ING— have formed a united front against the proposal. They believe the digital euro would duplicate existing private efforts to build a unified European payments network.
Their alternative, Wero, already operates in Belgium, France, and Germany, and aims to expand across the entire eurozone. It was designed to reduce reliance on non-European providers such as Visa, Mastercard, and PayPal.
The banks behind Wero argue that the ECB’s proposed retail digital currency risks disrupting this progress instead of supporting it.
The growing resistance from the banking sector has now reached policymakers, who are questioning whether the project should proceed in its current form.
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Lawmakers Push for Scaled-Back Version
The ECB is pressing ahead with plans for a 2027 pilot, though the full rollout still needs political approval. Under existing law, the central bank cannot issue digital money without authorization from the European Parliament and national governments.
Lawmakers are increasingly concerned that an online version of the digital euro could compete with private payment systems, rather than complementing them.
Today, the European Parliament meets to discuss the digital euro. But it does so amid increasingly vocal opposition.
Fourteen European banks, including Deutsche Bank, BNP Paribas, ING and others, are warning that the digital euro will undermine private sector payment systems –…
— Noelle Acheson (@NoelleInMadrid) November 5, 2025
Support is therefore building for a scaled-down, offline-only model that would act as a digital form of cash. It would allow payments without internet access and avoid overlap with established commercial networks already operating across Europe.
While the digital euro faces resistance at home, Europe’s broader regulatory agenda may also be strengthening its rivals abroad.
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Crypto Rules Tilt Advantage to the US
The EU’s Markets in Crypto-Ass
