Visa expands stablecoin support but everyday use still isn’t there
Visa is adding more blockchains to its stablecoin network, though real world adoption still feels limited for most users.
Visa is adding more blockchains to its stablecoin network, though real world adoption still feels limited for most users.
World Liberty Financial’s Trump-linked stablecoin USD1 has crossed $3 billion in circulating supply, a milestone that raises fresh questions about adoption, transparency, and reserves.
Klarna is experimenting with USDC denominated funding through a new partnership with Coinbase, signaling growing interest in stablecoins as institutional financial infrastructure.
Visa has launched USDC settlement for U.S. banks, bringing stablecoins directly into VisaNet infrastructure and raising new questions about risk and normalization.
Klarna launches its first stablecoin, KlarnaUSD, as stablecoin volumes surge and the company deepens its work with Stripe and Tempo.
Ripple is buying GTreasury for $1 billion, expanding into the corporate treasury world. The deal could change how big companies move money and may have ripple effects for everyone else.
Cloudflare has stunned the tech world with NET Dollar, a stablecoin built to support microtransactions and AI-driven payments online.
JPMorgan Chase is teaming up with Coinbase to offer credit card funding, rewards point crypto conversions, and direct bank linking.
PayPal is going big on crypto, letting US merchants accept over 100 cryptocurrencies with fast settlement and up to 90 percent lower fees.