Why Is Crédit Agricole Launching A Euro Stablecoin?
Crédit Agricole has launched EURO eXchange Token, a euro-backed stablecoin issued through Crédit Agricole Caisse d’Epargne Investor Services, the bank’s asset servicing arm known as CACEIS.
The token, trading under the EURXT name, was launched alongside the first subscription using EURXT into a tokenized Amundi Money Market Fund. That initial use case shows how the bank intends to position the stablecoin: not as a retail payment product, but as settlement infrastructure for institutional tokenized finance.
Crédit Agricole is Europe’s third-largest bank by assets, giving the launch broader relevance for the region’s digital asset market. A stablecoin backed by a major banking group adds another regulated option for institutions looking to move cash-like instruments on-chain without relying only on crypto-native issuers.
EURXT is issued on Ethereum and structured as an electronic money token pegged 1:1 to the euro. It is initially aimed at institutional investors and corporate clients, placing it inside a growing market for bank-backed tokens that can support fund subscriptions, on-chain settlement, treasury activity, and tokenized real-world assets.
How Is EURXT Structured?
According to the project’s white paper, EURXT does not have a hard issuance cap. The supply can expand based on market demand through its smart contract system.
“As of the date of the white paper, there is no limit on the issuance of EURXT. The number of EURXT in circulation will depend on market demand,” the white paper reads.
Data from the project’s website showed 20.02 million EURXT tokens in circulation at launch, matched by roughly 20.02 million euros in reserves held by CACEIS Bank. That structure is designed to maintain the token’s 1:1 euro backing while allowing issuance to scale if institutional demand increases.
The reserve model will be central to how investors evaluate the token. For a euro stablecoin issued by a bank-linked entity, the key questions are not only whether each token is backed, but also how reserves are held, how redemptions work, what disclosures are available, and whether the structure remains compliant as supply grows.
Investor Takeaway
EURXT gives Crédit Agricole a direct role in regulated on-chain settlement. The token’s first use in a tokenized money market fund points to a narrow but important institutional strategy: using stablecoins as cash legs for tokenized financial products.
Why Does MiCA Compliance Matter?
The launch comes under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets framework, which sets rules for crypto-asset service providers and issuers of digital assets. EURXT is structured as an electronic money token, a category that is especially relevant for fiat-backed stablecoins in Europe.
CACEIS secured a MiCA crypto-asset service provider license from French regulators in June 2025. That license gives the group a clearer regulatory basis for expanding digital asset services inside the EU, though questions remain around the visibility of the token’s electronic money token approval in the European Securities and Markets Authority register, which was shown as last updated on June 26.
The regulatory angle is central to the product’s market positioning. European institutions are unlikely to build settlement processes around stablecoins that lack clear legal treatment. MiCA gives issuers a framework for reserve management, authorization, disclosures, and supervision, making regulated euro stablecoins more usable for banks, asset managers, and corporate clients.
For Crédit Agricole, the stablecoin also supports a broader tokenization strategy. The first EURXT subscription into a tokenized Amundi Money Market Fund links the token directly to fund distribution and cash management, rather than leaving it as a standalone digital currency product.
What Does This Mean For Bank-Led Tokenization?
EURXT enters a market where traditional financial institutions are becoming more active in stablecoins and tokenized assets. HSBC and BNP Paribas joined the Canton Foundation last September to support tokenization of institutional real-world assets, showing that Europe’s largest banks are testing blockchain infrastructure for mainstream financial markets.
The competitive pressure is also rising among euro-denominated stablecoins. AllUnity has been expanding its MiCA-compliant stablecoin stack, while Quantoz Payments continues rolling out euro-denominated products. These efforts reflect a race to build regulated digital cash instruments that can support settlement, trading, collateral movement, and tokenized funds.
The U.S. market is moving on a parallel track. More than 140 companies, including Visa, Mastercard, Coinbase, and Ripple, have joined the Open USD stablecoin project, which allows participants to mint the dollar-pegged token at no cost and retain earnings from reserves.
For institutional investors, the key issue is whether bank-backed stablecoins can offer enough liquidity, transparency, and interoperability to compete with larger crypto-native tokens. EURXT starts with a modest supply of about 20 million euros, but its significance comes from the issuer and use case. A major European bank is using a regulated euro token to connect traditional fund products with blockchain settlement.
The launch shows that tokenization is moving beyond pilots and into live market plumbing. Stablecoins such as EURXT may become the settlement layer for tokenized money market funds, securities, and institutional cash products, provided regulators, banks, and investors agree on the standards for reserves, redemption, and operational risk.

