Close Menu
  • Home
  • Finance News
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Cards
    • Credit Cards
    • Debit
  • Insurance
  • Loans
  • Mortgage
  • More
    • Save Money
    • Banking
    • Taxes
    • Crime
What's Hot

Can CION Afford Its Monthly Dividend?

February 26, 2026

ClearOne Advantage for Debt Settlement: 2026 Review

February 26, 2026

Proxy voting: What it is and why it matters

February 26, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Smart SpendingSmart Spending
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Finance News
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Cards
    • Credit Cards
    • Debit
  • Insurance
  • Loans
  • Mortgage
  • More
    • Save Money
    • Banking
    • Taxes
    • Crime
Smart SpendingSmart Spending
Home»Banking»Stablecoins draw attention, but are still a tiny market. | PaymentsSource
Banking

Stablecoins draw attention, but are still a tiny market. | PaymentsSource

February 26, 2026No Comments9 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Stablecoins draw attention, but are still a tiny market. | PaymentsSource
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
  • Key insights: Revolut, Tether and Circle made announcements this week designed to boost their stablecoin profiles. 
  • What’s at stake: Stablecoins are growing quickly and are attracting investment, creating an arms race among banks and fintechs. 
  • Forward look: Despite the growth in stablecoins, McKinsey says stablecoin payments are still a small part of the overall payments market. 

One of the big stories in the payments industry over the past year has been stablecoins, which have gotten a regulatory boost and a series of fintechs seeking bank charters and banks considering how to approach the market. 

Processing Content

But the story appears to be outracing the reality. Even with fast growth the market is very small, according to McKinsey. 

There are about $300 billion in stablecoins circulating, according to McKinsey, adding that’s up from less than $30 billion in 2020. McKinsey also noted projections from U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent that the stablecoin supply could reach $3 trillion by 2030. And financial institutions peg the supply could reach as high as $4 trillion in the same time frame. 

But that’s not the payments market. McKinsey partnered with blockchain analytics firm Artemis Analytics to separate trading, internal fund movements and automated activity from payments. After running those numbers through the strainer, McKinsey found that actual stablecoin payments totaled closer to $390 billion in 2025 — or about 0.02% of global payments volume. And even for use cases such as B2B payments and remittances, stablecoins are gains of sand on the beach.

For B2B payments, stablecoins totaled about $226 billion in 2026, or about 0.01% of the global B2B payment volume of about $1.6 quadrillion, McKinsey said. And for remittances, there were $90 billion in stablecoin payments volumes, which is less than 1% of the more than $100 trillion in total volumes from this segment, McKinsey said. 

There are benefits to stablecoins, McKinsey said, such as addressing inefficiencies in cross-border payments. They just aren’t being used for that yet.

And banks are interested. Forty-seven percent of banks say their institution’s clients were asking for general information about cryptocurrency, followed by 35% who said clients were asking for the ability to make payments using cryptocurrencies, according to research from American Banker, adding 27% said that customers were asking for institutionally provided custody of digital assets.

Given the growth and anticipated demand, there’s plenty of investment in stablecoins, with several announcements in just the past few days. 

Tiffany Hagler-Geard/Bloomberg

Tether invests in web market Whop

In an effort to extend stablecoins deeper into what it calls “real economic activity,” stablecoin issuer Tether has made an investment in Whop, an internet marketplace.

See also  Vought capitulates to court order, asks for CFPB funding

The size of the investment was not disclosed. Tether hopes the resulting partnership will enable easier processing for customers who use USDT and USAT for international payments, avoiding what Tether says is a complicated exchange process. Whop’s platform supports more than 18.4 million users, with participants earning approximately $3 billion annually.

Tether’s funding round will support expansion in Latin America, Europe and Asia-Pacific. “Stablecoins and wallets become most powerful when they are embedded directly into people’s lives, supporting their businesses, activities, families and individual stories,” Paolo Ardoino, CEO of Tether, said in a release.

In an earlier interview, Ardoino said Tether will focus on its strength in emerging markets to counter bank interest in stablecoins due to the passage of enabling legislation in the U.S. “In a certain way Tether is lucky,” Ardoino told American Banker in 2025. “Everyone that is launching a stablecoin will go after a single user base … the institutional or wealthy user base, at least relative to the rest of the world.”

Jeremy Allaire, chief executive of Circle Internet Financial Inc.

Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg

Circle touts stablecoin growth

The boost in attention that stablecoins have gotten over the past year appears to be paying off for Circle, as the USDC issuer reports there was $75.3 billion of the stablecoin in circulation at the end of 2025, up 72% from the prior year. Circle on Wednesday also reported a net loss from continuing operations in 2025 of $70 million, mostly due to  $424 million for stock-based compensation related to vesting conditions met by its IPO, the company said. This compares to net income from continuing operations in 2024 of $157 million.

“The fourth quarter marked another step forward in Circle’s mission to build the infrastructure for an open, programmable internet financial system,” said Jeremy Allaire, co-founder and CEO of Circle, in a release. Circle has gotten a boost from initiatives such as the Circle Payments Network, which has enrolled 55 financial institutions with 74 others going through eligibility reviews as of Feb. 20. “USDC adoption continued to expand globally as more enterprises, developers and public institutions integrated digital dollars into real-world payments, treasury and on-chain financial workflows,” Allaire said.

Circle in the past year has also added scale through partnerships with firms such as Visa, Intuit, Polymarket and FIS. The “timing of USDC commercialization remains uncertain, in our view, but we believe Circle is increasingly controlling its own destiny,” William Blair said in a research note.

Nik Storonsky at Revolut’s new global headquarters in London, on Sept. 23.

ADRIAN DENNIS/Photographer: Adrian Dennis/AFP/

Revolut joins a UK stablecoin sandbox

The Financial Conduct Authority has chosen London fintech Revolut to test stablecoin technology in a “sandbox,” which refers to a lab setting with less regulatory pressure than a real-world environment. 

See also  BOK counting on mortgage finance for a boost in 2026

The FCA, which said it got 20 applications, also chose fintechs Monee Financial Technologies, ReStabilise and VVTX. These firms will study how stablecoins would perform given pending regulations and economic risk. The first use cases will be payments, wholesale settlement and crypto trading ahead of regulations that go into effect in September.

The U.K. has come under fire for its relatively slow pace in regulating stablecoins, which critics say places the country behind the European Union and the U.S., which have passed enabling regulations for stablecoins.  

“We are supporting U.K. stablecoin issuers to ensure they can be trusted for payments, settlement and trading. It will benefit consumers and financial transactions and help to deliver the FCA’s strategy and the Government’s National Payments Vision,” Matthew Long, director of payments and digital assets at the FCA, said in a release.

Visa boosts its profile in Argentina

In global payments news this week outside of stablecoins, Visa has agreed to acquire Prisma and Newpay from private equity firm Advent International. Both firms sell primarily to clients in Argentina. Prisma offers credit, debit and prepaid cards.

Newpay offers real-time payments, and manages the local Benelco ATM network and bill payment platform PagoMisCuentas. Visa plans to pair the two firms to accelerate deployment of tokenization, biometric authentication, advance risk management and agentic commerce. Terms were not disclosed, and Visa said the deal is expected to close in the second quarter. 

“This acquisition is an important step for Visa in Argentina, strengthening our client partnerships and advancing innovation across the payments ecosystem,” said Ryan McInerney, CEO of Visa, in a release. “By bringing together Prisma’s and Newpay’s deep local expertise with Visa’s global solutions and technology, we will empower our clients to make payments simpler, faster, and more secure for consumers and businesses.”

Both Visa and Mastercard have invested in Latin America in recent years, relying mostly on local partnerships and acquisitions to build scale. 

Worldline updates payments tech to fuel turnaround

French payments processor Wordline has integrated several merchant products to support shopping and payment experiences that cross channels such as mobile, online and in-store. 

Called One Commerce, the firm is attempting to address “omnichannel commerce,” or the trend toward merchants consolidating different ways to engage with shoppers. 

Worldline will also introduce an “à-la-carte” acquiring model, which enables merchants to choose their preferred acquires, with Worldline’s merchant acquiring service being among the options. 

“Worldline One Commerce is a strategic shift for retailers. It transforms payments from a transactional necessity into a powerful enabler of growth, efficiency and customer engagement. Our ambition is clear: to help merchants scale faster, innovate with confidence and deliver truly seamless omnichannel experiences,” David Valero Compte, global head of retail at Worldline Enterprise, said in a release. 

See also  Small businesses are too important for banks to leave them behind

Worldline, which is restructuring amid regulatory pressure and economic challenges, recently sold its Swedish subsidiary CoreOrchestration to Incore Invest for about $160 million. Worldline plans to use the proceeds of the sale to redeploy capital toward its core payments business. Following a stock sell-off, Worldline has also sold units that manage mobile technology, North American payments and electronic data management, totaling about $600 million.

Melinda Huspen/American Banker

Fiserv picks up distribution in Canada

Like Worldline, Fiserv is also battling an earnings slump. Fiserv has partnered with Canadian technology company Peoples Group to sell a suite of payments technology covering real-time processing, e-commerce and other tools.

Fiserv has entered into a series of partnerships in recent months as it looks to recover from an earrings slump in the fall. Recent moves include an expanded strategic partnership with enterprise artificial intelligence firm ServiceNow, a deal that will improve Fiserv’s IT departments and the customer service units that support Fiserv’s clients.

Fiserv is also working with Google, Mastercard and Visa to expand agentic commerce, which refers to a form of AI that enables shopping and payments with little or no human supervision. “Peoples Group is at the leading edge of innovation in Canada’s financial ecosystem, and we’re proud to support their next-generation payments strategy,” said Sayantan Chakraborty, head of digital Payments at Fiserv, in a release. “With the Fiserv Enterprise Payments Platform, we’re delivering the scale, security and connectivity financial institutions and fintechs need to grow and compete across Canada.”

Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

MoneyGram lends its scale to UK blockchain project

Transfer giant MoneyGram has joined Vodafone and eToro in running three of the ten nodes for a new blockchain from the Midnight Foundation, a decentralized commerce organization. The three companies will each run a “node,” which means they are one of the users and operators of a shared network.

MoneyGram will also work with the Midnight Foundation to find ways for traditional payment networks to adopt blockchains while managing inhibiting factors such as privacy, compliance and security. Like rival Western Union, MoneyGram has updated its business in recent years to respond to the growth of digital payments while maintaining its existing branch network. This includes a crypto wallet and a series of partnerships that enable crypto-to-traditional currency transfers. 

“MoneyGram has been delivering real-world crypto solutions for years, focusing on making the benefits of digital finance accessible to the people who actually need them,” said Luke Tuttle, MoneyGram chief product and technology officer, in a release. “Working with Midnight and running blockchain nodes fits naturally into this strategy, allowing us to help ensure that privacy, compliance and reliability are built in from day one.” 

Source link

attention draw Market PaymentsSource stablecoins tiny
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
Previous ArticleStocks making the biggest moves after hours: NVDA, CRM, SNOW, NTNX
Next Article Fewer active managers beat index funds last year: Morningstar

Related Posts

How Santander plans to avoid US ‘graveyard’ for European banks

February 26, 2026

WisdomTree gets SEC approval for real time trading

February 25, 2026

Fincen seeking advisors for panel on modernizing AML

February 25, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Bitwise CIO cites ‘the four-year cycle’ for losses

February 10, 2026

How Three Women Turned Everyday Life Into Digital Gold

June 2, 2025

Trump’s win is already driving mortgage rate hikes in Canada

November 7, 2024
Ads Banner

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to Get the Latest Financial Tips and Insights Delivered to Your Inbox!

Stay informed with our finance blog! Get expert insights, money management tips, investment strategies, and the latest financial news to help you make smart financial decisions.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
Top Insights

Can CION Afford Its Monthly Dividend?

February 26, 2026

ClearOne Advantage for Debt Settlement: 2026 Review

February 26, 2026

Proxy voting: What it is and why it matters

February 26, 2026
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to Get the Latest Financial Tips and Insights Delivered to Your Inbox!

© 2026 Smartspending.ai - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.