CoinDCX CEO Says INR Stablecoins Can Cut $125B Remittance Costs
CoinDCX CEO Sumit Gupta argues that a regulated, INR-backed stablecoin could save India billions in remittance costs.

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CoinDCX CEO Sumit Gupta argues that an INR-backed stablecoin is a crucial missing piece for India's digital economy.
He believes a regulated stablecoin could reduce remittance costs by up to 90%, saving Indian families billions of dollars.
Gupta countered common fears about stablecoins, suggesting they can be fully backed and audited, making them safer than traditional fractional reserve banking.
He urged Indian regulators to act and create a framework for stablecoins, pointing to the successful models in Singapore, the UK, and the EU.
India is racing toward becoming a $10 trillion economy. But one missing piece, according to CoinDCX CEO Sumit Gupta, is the absence of an INR-backed stablecoin. In a series of posts on X, Gupta argued that the opportunity is too big to ignore. Globally, the stablecoin market has already crossed $150 billion. Yet India, despite its scale, has yet to launch a rupee-linked version. Gupta believes an INR stablecoin could lower costs, speed up payments, and widen financial access. He stressed that India’s digital rails, led by UPI, make it uniquely suited for this innovation. “The rupee should lead the digital future,” he wrote.
Clearing Misconceptions
Sumit Gupta addressed common fears around stablecoins. Some critics compare them to 19th-century “wildcat” banking, when unstable currencies circulated without backing. He countered that regulated stablecoins today are fully backed and transparent. For example, USDC is supported one-to-one by cash and government securities, with daily attestations and monthly audits. Gupta suggested India could go even further. INR stablecoins, he said, should be backed 100% by rupee reserves, with oversight from the Reserve Bank of India. This, he argued, would make them safer than banks that operate under fractional reserve systems.
Cutting Remittance Costs
One of the strongest arguments came on remittances. India received more than $125 billion in 2024, the world’s highest. But the cost of sending money remains steep. Traditional transfers often rely on SWIFT channels, with fees eating into household earnings. CoinDCX CEO said blockchain-based stablecoin transfers could cut costs by up to 90%. Direct payouts into UPI-linked wallets would allow near-instant settlement. More importantly, this would mean more money in the hands of Indian families rather than lost in intermediaries’ fees.
Regulation as an Enabler
Some worry that stablecoins could destabilize financial markets. Gupta rejected this view, pointing to global evidence. He noted that issuers of leading stablecoins hold over $120 billion in short-term U.S. Treasuries, acting as steady buyers. During the 2023 Silicon Valley Bank crisis, Circle redeemed billions of USDC without losing its peg.
Other countries, including Singapore, the UK, and the EU, already require stablecoins to hold full reserves. They undergo audits and provide regular disclosures. Gupta argued that India can adopt similar safeguards while leveraging its strong fintech ecosystem. “The choice is clear,” Gupta concluded. “We can let outdated fears hold us back, or we can turn INR stablecoins into a strategic advantage.”

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