Mastercard has recently expanded its involvement in the stablecoin ecosystem through a series of strategic integrations and collaborations.
Involvement Across Major Players
The company aims to align itself with leading firms as digital asset strategies evolve within the financial sector. Mastercard will join Paxos’ Global Dollar Network, signaling its intent to integrate PayPal’s PYUSD and Fiserv’s proposed FIUSD stablecoin.
Mastercard already supports Circle’s USDC, currently the second largest stablecoin by market capitalization.
Bridging Gaps in Security and Infrastructure
A representative from Mastercard stated that while stablecoins provide several advantages such as faster cross-border transfers and real-time earnings for gig workers, they do not offer the same level of security, acceptance, and infrastructure provided by established card networks. The company is working to bridge these gaps.
Enabling Consumer Transactions
The firm enables consumers to use their stablecoin balances for transactions at over 150 million merchant locations globally through existing arrangements with crypto wallets and exchanges including MetaMask, Crypto.com, OKX, Kraken, Binance, Bybit, and Coinbase.
Collaborations and Infrastructure Upgrades
Mastercard is working on several initiatives to connect digital asset platforms. These include linking Fiserv’s Digital Asset Platform with the Mastercard Multi-Token Network for financial institutions, fintechs, and public sector entities.
The company is also updating its existing Move service to facilitate the sending and receiving of stablecoins through wallets and financial institutions.
Responding to Legislative Changes
These updates come as the U.S. legislative environment, such as the GENIUS Act, prompts more institutions to develop their own digital currency strategies.
The card network’s approach reflects ongoing concerns about disintermediation in stablecoin-based payment systems that could potentially sidestep traditional card networks through direct fiat-to-digital currency conversions at transaction endpoints. This presents a challenge to existing card-based revenue models.
Attention from Large Retailers
The growth of interest from major retailers is also notable, with Walmart and Amazon reportedly exploring internal stablecoin projects as potential responses to long-standing disputes over transaction fees with traditional card networks.
Latest Posts
-
BRICS Puts Its Payment Rail on the Front Burner
BRICS Payment System Moves Forward The long-rumored BRICS payment system may…
BY
-
Equifax Launches Credit Abuse Risk Model to Detect First-Party Fraud
As one of the three major credit bureaus in the United…
BY
-
As Crypto Money Laundering Soars, Governments Seek Ways to Fight Back
Crypto money laundering has surged at an alarming rate, reaching at…
BY
-
UK Regulators Voice Concerns About AI’s Role in Financial Services
As financial institutions increasingly rely on artificial intelligence in critical functions…
BY
-
PhotonPay Expands UK Local Payment Rails via New Collaboration with ClearBank
ClearBank and PhotonPay Unite in Partnership for Enhanced Financial Services ClearBank,…
BY
-
Where Financial Institutions Fit in the AR/AP Value Chain
A single purchase request now triggers a web of approvals, data…
BY
-
Experian Raises Concerns Over Emerging Agentic Commerce Fraud
Artificial intelligence is assisting shoppers in finding items and comparing prices,…
BY
-
Weak Master Passwords Led to the Theft of Millions in Crypto
A multi-year cryptocurrency theft operation has been linked to Russian hackers…
BY
-
EU Payments Fraud Rises Despite Effective Authentication Measures
The Revised Payments Services Directive (PSD2) and Its Impact on Fraud…
BY
-
BRICS Moves Forward on a Common Currency for Cross-Border
The BRICS nations are advancing plans for an internal trade currency,…
BY
