
Stablecoins go mainstream: Why banks and credit card firms are issuing their own crypto tokens
A $44 billion IPO. A Senate bill with bipartisan momentum. And now, a wave of Fortune 500 firms launching crypto tokens of their own.
Stablecoins — once a niche corner of the cryptocurrency world — are entering the corporate and policy mainstream, potentially reshaping how money moves in the United States and around the world.
"Many of the users out there today are not aware of stablecoins, or not interested in stablecoins, and they should not be," said Jose Fernandez da Ponte, PayPal's SVP of blockchain, crypto and digital currencies. "It should just be a way in which you move value, and in many cases, is going to be an infrastructure layer."
For corporations, stablecoins are an opportunity to slash millions in transaction fees and turbocharge payment infrastructure with instantaneous settlement.
USDC issuer Circle's long-awaited public debut exposed a wave of pent-up demand for digital dollars as investors sent the stock soaring as much as 750% in June. Partnerships, and competition, quickly followed.
Coinbase announced a deal with e-commerce platform Shopify to bring USDC payments to merchants. Payments firm Fiserv announced a stablecoin to pair with the 90 billion transactions it processes every year.
"We're entering the utility phase right now, where the technology has matured. It's gotten fast, it's gotten cheap," said Jesse Pollak, head of base and wallet at Coinbase. "It's gotten easy to use, and that's leading to real-world adoption across businesses and consumers."
Base is Coinbase's Ethereum layer-2 network, designed to make blockchain applications faster, cheaper, and more accessible to developers and users.
Merchants are a particular focus for stablecoins, as payment processing fees for these businesses totaled a record $187.2 billion in 2024, according to the Nilson Report. Payment companies are looking to fend off potential disruption by stablecoin issuers.
Mastercard this week announced support for four stablecoins on its Multi-Token Network. The private blockchain is targeted toward institutions and promises 24-hour settlement.
Visa's CEO told CNBC the payment processor is modernizing its infrastructure with the help of stablecoins.
"Visa and MasterCard are leaning into the disruption," said Nic Carter, founding partner at Castle Island Ventures. "They're trying to disrupt themselves, so they seem to be ahead of the curve."
JPMorgan took a slightly different approach to the crypto token boom on Wall Street. The financial giant launched a token backed by commercial bank deposits rather than U.S. dollars.
JPMorgan's Naveen Mallela, global co-head of Kinexys, the bank's blockchain unit, told CNBC the JPMD token would allow for round-the-clock settlement for institutional clients looking for faster, cheaper transactions while staying connected to the traditional banking system.
The boom in crypto adoption on Wall Street is bolstered by growing support in Washington.
The Senate passed its framework of rules for stablecoins, called the GENIUS Act. The bill includes guidelines for consumer protections, reserve requirements for issuers, and anti-money laundering guidance.
Stablecoins and other cryptocurrencies have faced criticism for their use in illicit activity, and some Democrats argue the bill doesn't do enough to address those concerns. Those lawmakers also argue the bill doesn't curtail conflicts of interest, including the recent launch of a stablecoin tied to President Donald Trump through World Liberty Financial.
The crypto-focused firm run by his family is behind the dollar-pegged token USD1.
When asked about Trump's ties to crypto projects in his name, the White House told CNBC there are no conflicts of interest and the president's assets are in a trust managed by his children.
"I think it was a mistake for Trump to have a Trump-affiliated DeFi project issue a stablecoin. I think that really set back his stablecoin legislative agenda," Carter said. "I think we could do it a lot more in terms of tackling these conflicts of interest. And I completely understand the Democrats when they try and weed this out."
Watch the video above to learn why corporate giants are racing to launch their own crypto tokens
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
3 hours ago
- Newsweek
Trump Reacts to 'Great, Big, Beautiful Bill' Senate Vote
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. President Donald Trump has hailed the Senate's narrow vote to advance his flagship legislation, celebrating it as a "great victory" for his agenda as Republicans rush to deliver the legislation by July 4. The U.S. Senate voted 51-49 to open debate on the One Big Beautiful Bill, bringing it one step closer to landing on Trump's desk ahead of the self-imposed deadline. "Tonight we saw a GREAT VICTORY in the Senate with the "GREAT, BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL," but, it wouldn't have happened without the Fantastic Work of Senator Rick Scott, Senator Mike Lee, Senator Ron Johnson, and Senator Cynthia Lummis," Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. The $4 trillion package would permanently extend $3.8 trillion in expiring benefits while dedicating $350 billion in spending to fund Trump's hardline mass deportation plans. However, proposed cuts to Medicaid and food assistance programs have sparked public fractures within GOP ranks. Two Republican senators, Thom Tillis of North Carolina and Rand Paul of Kentucky, defied Trump and joined all Democrats in voting against it. President Donald Trump answers questions from reporters on Friday, June 27, 2025, in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington. President Donald Trump answers questions from reporters on Friday, June 27, 2025, in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington. Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP This is a developing story.

Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Trump's tax and spending cuts bill clears key test vote in Senate as Republicans race to get measure to president's desk
WASHINGTON (AP) — Trump's tax and spending cuts bill clears key test vote in Senate as Republicans race to get measure to president's desk.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Republicans steamroll toward final vote on Trump's tax and spending cuts bill
Republicans are closer than ever to passing President Donald Trump's huge party-line tax and spending cuts bill before July 4, as the Senate advanced it, 51-49, in a crucial vote late Saturday. Still, Republicans need 50 of their 53 members to ultimately support it — and possibly Vice President JD Vance's tie-breaking vote to clinch the legislation. They're in the middle of a very long weekend, expecting multiple defections and a razor-thin victory. 'Right now, I think we'll lose three votes on the final bill. And JD will have to break a tie,' said Sen. John Kennedy, R-La. Still, the legislation is looking far less wobbly than three days ago as Trump is getting increasingly involved in one-on-one whipping of hesitant Republicans, multiple sources told Semafor. He golfed on Saturday with Sens. Rand Paul, R-Ky.; Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.; and Eric Schmitt, R-Mo.; and also met with Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla.; Ron Johnson, R-Wis.; and Katie Britt, R-Ala. Graham called it a good 'bonding experience' for Paul and Trump and predicted the bill would ultimately pass, citing support for advancing the bill from Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Josh Hawley of Missouri — though Collins said her final vote is contingent on softening its cuts to Medicaid. Hawley said he would support final passage and that he'd heard that House Speaker Mike Johnson is signaling he can get the bill to Trump's desk within days to avoid a protracted negotiation. 'We're trending definitely in the right direction,' said Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla. The GOP gained momentum for the Senate version of the megabill — which the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget projects will add at least $4 trillion in debt — just before midnight on Saturday. That's when Graham, chair of the Budget Committee, released new provisions designed to help Republicans have time to read the bill before an initial vote that could come as soon as Saturday afternoon. The new version of the bill contains harsher phaseouts for Biden-era clean energy credits, a delay in cuts to a provider tax used to fund Medicaid in many states, and a front-loaded $25 billion fund for rural hospitals that are likely to be affected by the bill's Medicaid cuts. It will take a long time for those to become law. Senate Democrats, led by Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, are going to force the Senate clerks to read the bill on the floor, adding a dozen or more hours to the chamber's workload. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., said he will not support the legislation unless its approach on Medicaid reverts to the House's less harsh cuts and said leadership knows 'I'm a no.' Sens. Johnson and Paul have also expressed opposition to the bill, albeit for other reasons: not enough spending cuts and the $5 trillion increase to the debt ceiling, respectively. Still, a flurry of deals over the last two days has put Republicans much closer to getting Trump a party-line law that he's eager to promote by Independence Day. Republicans are hopeful Trump's meeting with Scott can put him in the 'yes' column, although they gave up on Paul long ago and Graham doubted he could support the final product. The legislation initially contained Sen. Mike Lee's slimmed-down plan to sell public lands — though he later said he would stand down and remove it amid intraparty resistance. The Utah Republican also said he liked the new bill's more aggressive cuts to clean energy credits, though he hasn't decided how he will vote. Johnson, Lee, and Scott had said they could vote as a bloc on the bill. The pro-clean energy group Protect Our Jobs expanded its $1.1 million national TV ad buy on Saturday to hit Republicans for supporting what it warns will be a 'national rate hike' on electricity stemming from those cuts, according to details shared with Semafor. 'Protect Our Jobs is more than doubling our buy to make sure members know that they are supporting a national rate hike,' said a spokesperson for the group. 'We are also expanding into other states, such as Ohio and Iowa and going back into congressional districts like Brian Fitzpatrick, Mike Carey, Miller-Meeks, Gabe Evans. More to come. This isn't over.' Democrats will get a chance to take aim at provisions in the bill that could split the GOP during an unlimited 'vote-a-rama' that could take place sometime Sunday, now that Republicans have gotten over the initial 50-vote hurdle. Democrats huddled on Saturday afternoon to plot their strategy, which will require picking off four Republicans and keeping unified to change the bill. Another provision in the huge bill that could get removed on a bipartisan vote: an attempt to stop states from coming up with their own AI regulations. 'I just hate that language,' Hawley said of the AI provision, adding that Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., is leading the effort to strip it. And Collins still wants structural changes to the bill's Medicaid cuts before she'll vote for the final product. 'That's going to depend on whether the bill is substantially changed,' Collins said. 'I will be filing a number of amendments.' A number of battleground-seats House GOP moderates who had opposed quick phaseouts of the clean energy credits were already hit with spending from Protect Our Jobs, per Punchbowl News. A full of what made the cut in the bill, as reported by Politico.