Quantitative Data Reveals the “Decisive Battle” Between Traditional Finance and Cryptocurrency! Mega Bank Chairman Dong Rui-bin publicly released a three-month cross-border remittance test report on March 10, involving 25 branches worldwide. The report shows that while stablecoins (USDT) demonstrate “lightning-fast” transfers within 20 minutes for small amounts (under NT$200,000), traditional banks still hold an irreplaceable moat in large corporate remittances and compliance.
(Background: Minbao exclusive: Gogoro founder Lu Xuesen defaults on debt and goes missing; YIN YANLIANG pursues NT$150 million in cross-border claims in the US)
(Additional context: Mega Bank Chairman: The three major pitfalls of stablecoins—no one can profit from them? Straightforwardly states “Banks can’t find advantages in issuing them.”)
Table of Contents
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- Test Data Decoded: The Tug-of-War Between Speed and Cost
- Regulatory Red Lines: Only 12 of 25 Branches Successfully Pass
- Mega Bank Cross-Border Remittance Test Comparison Table
- Chairman Dong Rui-bin: Not Replacing, But Complementing
When the crypto community loudly claims “Stablecoins will replace banks,” Taiwan’s leading state-owned Mega Bank (Mega Bank) decided to speak with data. Starting December 2025, Mega Bank launched an ambitious experiment: mobilizing staff from 17 countries and 25 overseas branches to simultaneously conduct cross-border transfers using “stablecoins” and “traditional wire transfers.”
The results, shared at a media briefing on March 10, 2026, officially mark a professional footnote to this debate.
Test Data Decoded: The Tug-of-War Between Speed and Cost
In terms of remittance speed, stablecoins showcase the native advantages of blockchain:
- Stablecoins (USDT): Usually arrive within 20 minutes.
- Traditional Banks (SWIFT): Even under ideal conditions, typically take within 2 hours, and are easily affected by time zones and holidays.
However, regarding “cost structure,” an interesting crossover appears:
- Small amounts (under NT$200,000): Stablecoins, with relatively fixed fees (about 2 USDT + 0.2% transaction fee), are significantly cheaper than traditional banks (postal and telegraph fees NT$300 + transfer fees).
- Large amounts (over NT$200,000): Traditional banks have fee caps (around NT$1,100) and offer significant bargaining power for premium clients. Conversely, stablecoins, with proportional fee mechanisms, incur higher costs as amounts increase, compounded by hidden exchange rate spreads and taxes, making large transfers less advantageous.
Regulatory Red Lines: Only 12 of 25 Branches Successfully Pass
This test also unexpectedly revealed a major obstacle to the global adoption of stablecoins: fragmented regulation. Out of 25 branches, 13 failed due to local regulatory restrictions. Examples include:
- Absolute bans: Regulations in China, Hong Kong, etc.
- Currency preferences: Some regions (like New York) only recognize USDC, not USDT.
- Regional sovereignty: The EU prefers using euro-pegged stablecoins (EURC), and lacks compliant virtual asset service providers (VASPs).
This indicates that for stablecoins to become a universal payment tool, they still face high geopolitical and regulatory barriers.
Mega Bank Cross-Border Remittance Test Comparison Table
| Comparison Item |
Traditional Bank (SWIFT) |
Stablecoin (USDT) |
Mega Bank Test Conclusion |
| Arrival Time |
About 2 hours |
About 20 minutes |
Stablecoins Win |
| Cost for NT$200,000 or less |
Higher (NT$420–1,100) |
Significantly lower |
Stablecoins Win |
| Large/Corporate Transfers |
Bank wins (fees capped, bargaining space) |
Costs increase with amount (including spreads, taxes) |
Bank has clear advantage |
| Compliance & Security |
Highest (full KYC/AML, regulatory protection) |
Limited (affected by local regulations and platform risks) |
Bank has clear advantage |
| Global Availability |
Very high (extensive SWIFT network) |
Limited (only 12/25 branches succeeded in testing) |
Bank has clear advantage |
Chairman Dong Rui-bin: Not Replacing, But Complementing
Mega Bank Chairman Dong Rui-bin emphasized that this test is not about proving “traditional finance lost,” but about clarifying the roles of each. He believes stablecoins are suitable for solving “pain points” in small, instant personal transfers; but for large amounts, corporate needs, and strict compliance, traditional banks remain irreplaceable.
“This is not a replacement but a complementary relationship,” Dong summarized. The global application of stablecoins still has a long way to go before maturity.
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