Visa Giant Expands Stablecoin Settlement Capabilities Through USDC and Solana Chain

09/05/2023 20:35
Visa Giant Expands Stablecoin Settlement Capabilities Through USDC and Solana Chain

Visa continues to adjust itself to crypto, now planning to modernize cross-border money movement through USDC stablecoin and the Solana blockchain

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Yuri Molchan

Visa continues to adjust itself to crypto, now planning to modernize cross-border money movement through USDC stablecoin and the Solana blockchain

According to a press-release published by Business Wire, global payments behemoth Visa steps up to continue its experiments with crypto. This time, it intends to expand stablecoin settlement capabilities using USDC dollar-pegged stablecoin and use the Solana blockchain to begin pilot programs with merchant acquirers – Worldpay and Nuvei.

Visa has already been collaborating with the two top blockchain platform Ethereum for faster payments settlement via VisaNet.

The system offered by Visa helps clear, settle and transfer billions of USD worth of transactions between users’ banks and merchants’ banks on a daily basis, which remains invisible for users of Visa cards.

Using Solana and Ethereum chains and stablecoins, such as USDC, Visa will be able to conduct cross-border settlement faster and enable users to seamlessly send and receive money from Visa treasury, according to Visa’s chief of crypto, Cuy Sheffield. Basically, USDC together with Solana and Ethereum chains will help Visa improve their way of moving money transnationally.

Visa’s crypto journey with Crypto.com

The current pilots are stemming from the pilot program of Visa with the Crypto.com exchange started in 2021, when Visa also used USDC stablecoin to see if they could improve settlements on the issuance side.

This is when Visa also partnered with the Ethereum chain to utilize it in their pilot with Crypto.com for card-based payments in Australia. Before that pilot took place, transnational purchases made with Crypto.com cards issued in a partnership with Visa took days and expensive international wire transfers to settle.

Adding Solana and expanding from issuers to acquirers

Now, Visa has expanded its pilot and included the top blockchain Solana as well as acquirers, such as Worldpay and Nuvei to shorten the times of settlements for their merchants.

Visa needed a new blockchain partner, aside from Ethereum, for this new part of their program, so they picked Solana for conducting USDC settlement operations between merchants and acquirers. Thus, Visa became the first major payments company that is using the tools offered by Solana to make payments seamless.

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