After years of building competing stablecoin strategies, some of the world’s largest financial services players are now exploring an unexpected move—joining forces on a single, unified platform.
What would have once been a fragmented race toward proprietary solutions is beginning to look more coordinated. A collaboration among rival payments giants Visa and Mastercard alone would be enough to shake up the sector, but Stripe will reportedly participate in the platform and Coinbase is evaluating whether it will join the group.
“This shows that stablecoins are moving from a crypto product to payments infrastructure,” said Joel Hugentobler, Cryptocurrency Analyst at Javelin Strategy & Research. “The fact that these big players might collaborate tells us the market is shifting from isolated bets to shared orchestration that can help stablecoins scale.”
Bringing Resources to the Table
This effort could scale rapidly, given the significant resources each of these firms brings. Mastercard’s recent acquisition of stablecoin payments infrastructure firm BVNK represented one of the largest institutional bets on digital asset infrastructure to date.
The deal, reportedly valued at roughly $1.8 billion, was among the largest digital assets acquisitions in history, surpassing Stripe’s acquisition of stablecoin infrastructure firm Bridge. That transaction was also a milestone deal, and the institution-friendly platform has gained traction across payments use cases.
For its part, Visa has expanded stablecoin capabilities within its cross-border payments infrastructure and launched a Stablecoin Advisory Practice, offering training and tools for organizations exploring digital asset integration.
As the leading crypto player in the U.S., Coinbase also brings significant stablecoin infrastructure and expertise to the table, should it choose to participate in the platform.
No Longer About Issuance
The goal of these individual ventures has been to unlock new markets for established financial services firms, including use cases like cross-border remittances, business payments, and gig and creator payouts, where stablecoins can offer clear advantages.
A unified solution among these players could not only supercharge existing stablecoin efforts, but also create a formidable challenger to the dominance of Tether and Circle. Ultimately, this type of platform could help reshape the role of stablecoins within the broader financial system.
“Banks should pay attention because it will no longer be about issuance—it will be about who owns the relationship, settlement, and other aspects of orchestration and execution,” Hugentobler said.








