a16z: Recent Key Events of Traditional Finance Embracing Stablecoins

CN
7 hours ago

These events share a common core: meeting user needs.

Author: a16zcrypto

Translated by: Deep Tide TechFlow

We have mentioned multiple times that stablecoins are gradually disrupting the payment industry. Looking back at the past month, many of the world's top payment companies have finally begun to focus on this trend. In just six weeks, we have seen a series of significant events: Circle, the issuer of USDC, submitted an application to list on the New York Stock Exchange; Coinbase launched a stablecoin API payment standard, officially entering the agency payment field; Visa and Mastercard further strengthened their support for stablecoins; and Stripe released a series of new features, including stablecoin account balances, programmable stablecoins, and payment cards that support stablecoins.

These events share a common core: meeting user needs. This can be seen as the "Skype moment" in the payment field. Looking back to 2003, Skype launched a disruptive feature that allowed users to make calls to landlines at a lower cost via their computers. However, as more people joined the digital calling network, traditional phones were eventually abandoned in favor of internet-based WhatsApp calls. This marked a seamless transition of technology from landlines to mobile communication, and then to internet-based voice and data connections.

Similarly, connecting stablecoins with traditional payment systems can allow more people to access and use stablecoins, even if they still need to rely on compatible features provided by traditional payment companies. As individuals and businesses gradually adopt stablecoins through existing products, new opportunities will emerge—stablecoins will be widely used in scenarios such as self-custody, shopping, remittances, and DeFi.

Here is a timeline of key events from the past six weeks and their significance in the larger picture:

May 7 and 8: Stripe Launches Stablecoin Financial Accounts

Stripe announced the launch of "Stablecoin Financial Accounts," allowing business users to hold account balances in stablecoins across 101 countries. Additionally, they released USDB, a programmable stablecoin that developers can embed into their applications and earn rewards by building the USDB ecosystem.

Why is this important?

Stripe is promoting the adoption of stablecoins by directly embedding incentive mechanisms at the stablecoin level and attempting to gain more control over the payment ecosystem. The stablecoin financial accounts allow Stripe to bypass the complex processes and high costs of traditional banks, competing directly with banks and card networks. The number of supported countries has also expanded from 46 to 101. USDB could become the default stablecoin for Stripe products, providing more ways to monetize payments.

These initiatives enable Stripe to leverage neutral blockchain infrastructure rather than traditional card networks, offering products that are cheaper, more customizable, broader in scope, and more profitable.

May 7: MoneyGram Launches "MoneyGram Ramps"

MoneyGram launched "MoneyGram Ramps," a cash deposit and withdrawal channel that supports stablecoins, covering over 170 countries.

Why is this important?

Stablecoins have found a certain market fit in emerging markets, especially in areas with high remittance demand. However, converting between stablecoins and cash remains quite difficult, and cash is still a widely used payment method in many markets. MoneyGram has a global cash network that provides a new way for stablecoins to interoperate with everyday consumption and spending.

May 6: Coinbase Launches x402 Payment Standard

Coinbase introduced x402, a stablecoin payment standard designed for internet-native payments, aimed at achieving atomic transactions between APIs, applications, and AI agents.

Why is this important?

You may not know that Visa cannot process payments less than 1 cent. The future of "agent payments"—transactions executed on behalf of users by autonomous software agents—requires programmable currency. If we want these agents to purchase goods or services for us, stablecoins will be the ideal choice.

Companies like Stripe and Visa are exploring their own agent payment solutions, and stablecoins are favored for their basis on trusted, neutral, and decentralized platforms. In contrast, decentralized protocols do not have high fees, making stablecoins potentially the most economical choice in the long run. The x402 standard integrates stablecoin settlement, intent-based payments, and compliance into a single specification, far surpassing Visa and SWIFT in speed, composability, and programmability.

May 6: Visa Forms Strategic Partnership with BVNK

Visa announced a strategic partnership with stablecoin payment infrastructure company BVNK.

Why is this important?

Visa's partnership can be seen as a bet on stablecoin payment infrastructure, directly engaging in a payment track that could disrupt its existing business model. By collaborating with BVNK, Visa can not only counter Stripe's expanding stablecoin payment products but also secure a place in the future payment ecosystem.

Visa's strategy is quite clever: it is expected that other traditional payment companies will follow suit, or they risk being left behind by startups that dominate stablecoin payments.

April 28 and 30: Mastercard and Visa Launch Stablecoin Payment Products

On April 28, Mastercard announced partnerships with several exchanges and wallets, including Circle, OKX, and Paxos, to launch broader stablecoin integrations, allowing consumers to spend stablecoin balances via Mastercard cards. Two days later, Visa announced a collaboration with Bridge, supported by Stripe, allowing fintech developers to issue Visa cards linked to stablecoins, enabling users to pay with stablecoin balances at fiat points of sale through the Visa network.

Why is this important?

These products significantly lower the barrier for users to adopt stablecoins through integration with existing payment systems. Users do not need to worry about whether merchants support stablecoin payments; they can simply use their linked Visa or Mastercard to complete transactions.

Although stablecoin cards achieve compatibility with traditional payment infrastructure, in the future, merchants may prefer to accept stablecoin payments directly to avoid high card processing fees. At the same time, entrepreneurs will develop more new products, making stablecoins a more preferred payment method.

April 23: PayPal Announces 3.7% Yield

PayPal announced that starting in 2025, U.S. users holding PYUSD in their PayPal or Venmo balances will earn a 3.7% yield.

Why is this important?

PayPal aims to attract more deposits, even if those deposits may exist in MetaMask. By offering yields, they incentivize users to buy and hold stablecoins on their platform, while the use of PYUSD outside the platform can also bring more revenue to PayPal. The yield is just the first step; more measures to drive PYUSD transaction volume and integration may follow.

April 21: Circle Launches Circle Payments Network

Circle announced partnerships with several global banks and stablecoin startups to launch the Circle Payments Network to improve international payments.

Why is this important?

Circle is directly challenging SWIFT and traditional banking networks, attempting to replace their inefficient messaging services and payment processes. If successful, this initiative could completely change the landscape of international payments.

April 1: Circle Files for IPO

Circle submitted an application to list on the New York Stock Exchange, marking further recognition of the legitimacy of stablecoin payments.

Summary

Traditional payment companies have not only recognized the value of stablecoins but are also actively building key infrastructure to make stablecoins compatible with existing payment systems, thereby accelerating their adoption. Although these products may seem similar to traditional payment methods in the short term, they are actually laying the groundwork for a whole new on-chain economy.

In the future, we will see more people using stablecoins through traditional payment methods, and the infrastructure improvements launched this year will further drive users to adopt stablecoins directly. As the integration of stablecoins becomes simpler and more intuitive, network effects will also emerge: more entrepreneurs will develop a range of innovative products based on stablecoins, which can only be realized in an environment of nearly instant, nearly free programmable currency.

免责声明:本文章仅代表作者个人观点,不代表本平台的立场和观点。本文章仅供信息分享,不构成对任何人的任何投资建议。用户与作者之间的任何争议,与本平台无关。如网页中刊载的文章或图片涉及侵权,请提供相关的权利证明和身份证明发送邮件到support@aicoin.com,本平台相关工作人员将会进行核查。

Share To
APP

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink