A major payment network just opened doors to stablecoin payouts through its direct transfer rails. The move connects select businesses with a way to pre-fund transactions using USDC and similar stablecoins, then route those funds straight into recipients' digital wallets via established payment infrastructure.
This particular corridor handles roughly $1.7 trillion in flows annually. What's interesting here is the mechanics—businesses can now tap stablecoins as the funding layer while leveraging traditional payment rails for distribution. It's neither pure blockchain nor pure traditional rails; it's the two working together.
The integration essentially bridges the gap between how crypto-native organizations want to move money and what legacy financial infrastructure already does at scale. Whether this becomes a template for broader adoption really depends on how businesses respond to the operational flexibility it offers.
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A major payment network just opened doors to stablecoin payouts through its direct transfer rails. The move connects select businesses with a way to pre-fund transactions using USDC and similar stablecoins, then route those funds straight into recipients' digital wallets via established payment infrastructure.
This particular corridor handles roughly $1.7 trillion in flows annually. What's interesting here is the mechanics—businesses can now tap stablecoins as the funding layer while leveraging traditional payment rails for distribution. It's neither pure blockchain nor pure traditional rails; it's the two working together.
The integration essentially bridges the gap between how crypto-native organizations want to move money and what legacy financial infrastructure already does at scale. Whether this becomes a template for broader adoption really depends on how businesses respond to the operational flexibility it offers.