Why it is important: Cryptocurrencies still suffer from a brand gap despite growing institutional adoption, according to Stellar CMO Jason Karsh.
- Karsh said the industry relies too much on “esoteric words and verbiage” that alienate everyday users.
- He argued that cryptocurrencies “peaked publicly” too early due to speculative mania, distorting their real potential.
- The biggest opportunity: rebuilding global financial rails to move and store value more efficiently.
The big picture: Stellar is positioning itself at the center of tokenization and cross-border payments as institutions enter cryptocurrencies.
- The network has focused on payments and real-world financial use cases since its launch in 2014.
- That long-term approach is now paying off as regulators move closer to stablecoins and tokenized assets.
- Karsh said the goal is to eventually move “billions” of dollars to the network, beyond the first pilots.
Between the lines: Stablecoins are emerging as an entry-level product into cryptocurrencies, but messaging remains an obstacle.
- Karsh called stablecoins “the first killer use case” because they mirror familiar fiat currencies.
- Still, a broader public remains skeptical or confused about how they work.
- He suggested reframing them as programmable dollars that generate yield and move instantaneously.
What they are saying: Karsh is driving a radical break from short-term, advertising-driven crypto marketing.
- “You have to try to get rich slowly…create value every day,” he said.
- He criticized projects that prioritize token launches over sustainable products.
- Strong brands, he added, come from consistent execution and aligning the product with the message.
What’s next? The next wave of adoption may come from infrastructure, not speculation.
- Karsh expects growth to come from replacing legacy financial systems with blockchain rails.
- He predicts that both humans and AI agents will drive transaction growth, with agents eventually dominating volume.
- But short-term success depends on bringing in “100 million humans” first.




