Stablecoins pegged to the Turkish lira were the second-most-used stablecoins among clients of the digital asset exchange of banking giant Standard Chartered last year; however, volumes remain small compared to dollar-pegged tokens, ‌it said on Tuesday.

Stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency pegged to fiat currency, have surged in volume in recent years but are mostly used in crypto trading and ​not widely accepted as a means of payment.

"Our second-largest currency ​in terms of stablecoins last year was not the euro ⁠or any G-10 currency as one perhaps would’ve expected but rather the ​Turkish lira," Nick Philpott, co-founder and interim CEO of Zodia Markets, which ​is majority-owned by Standard Chartered, said at a press event.

His comments highlight the lack of demand for euro-pegged stablecoins, which a group of European banks plans to launch this ​year despite European Central Bank (ECB) scepticism.

There is more likely to be future ​demand for stablecoins in countries where the local financial infrastructure is weaker, or more ‌people are ⁠cut off from the financial system, Standard Chartered's crypto analyst Geoff Kendrick said.