stablecoins and settlement
In an effort to optimize the movement of funds – and settlement – in real-time between a consumer’s bank (the issuer) and the merchant’s bank (the acquirer), payments company VISA announced it is taking the next step in the use of stablecoins and Circle’s USDC.
According to a company press release: “Visa is expanding its stablecoin settlement capabilities to the high-performing Solana blockchain and is working with merchant acquirers (i.e. payment processors) Worldpay and Nuvei.” Read the release.
VISA details that it has been using stablecoins for settlement in various tests around the globe since 2021. The company is vague on how much is currently flowing through their stablecoin-infused, payment network today other than saying they’ve “moved millions of USDC between its partners over the Solana and Ethereum blockchain networks to settle fiat-denominated payments authorized over VisaNet.”
Nic Carter of Castle Island Ventures tweeted, “this is a huge deal. writing on the wall: stables will become defacto interbank settlement solution via card networks. even my non-crypto fintech friends are fired up about this.”
Settlement is a core use case for blockchain and crypto, in particular. More in Blockworks.
Late yesterday, the House Financial Services X account run by the Republican majority picked up the stablecoin baton and tweeted about the stablecoin bill percolating in the House, “Republicans like Rep. Mike Flood (R, NE) are advancing bipartisan legislation that includes both state and federal pathways for issuance and regulation.” Read Rep. Flood’s quote.
Ahhh, the state/federal conundrum… Democratic leadership has been guiding away from state oversight and towards federal as it relates to stablecoins. Will there be compromise this fall? Continue reading “VISA Seeks Better Settlement With Stablecoins; Congress Learning Digital Assets”