Companies

Visa Launches Stablecoin Advisory Unit as Tokenized Dollars Gain Traction

Visa is making a decisive move into stablecoins, showing that blockchain-based dollars are no longer an experiment but an increasingly central part of global payments infrastructure.

The payments giant has launched a global Stablecoins Advisory Practice, a dedicated unit designed to help banks, merchants, and fintech companies develop, deploy, and operate stablecoin products. The initiative focuses on the practical challenges institutions face as they move from exploration to execution, including product design, regulatory considerations, technology integration, and go-to-market strategy.

Visa says the new advisory group will also provide structured training, market intelligence, and technical enablement, reflecting growing demand from traditional financial players that want to participate in stablecoin-based payments without building everything in-house.

The creation of a standalone advisory practice suggests that stablecoins have reached a level of maturity that justifies a permanent business line within one of the world’s largest payment networks. Rather than a speculative bet, the move builds on infrastructure Visa has been developing quietly for years, including more than 130 stablecoin-linked card programs operating across over 40 countries and billions of dollars in annualized settlement volume using US dollar–backed tokens.

For financial institutions, the appeal is increasingly clear. Stablecoins offer the promise of faster settlement, lower costs, and improved cross-border payment efficiency compared with traditional rails. Some banks are now evaluating how tokenized dollars could fit into broader strategies aimed at serving large, global user bases more effectively.

Visa’s announcement comes amid a broader shift in how mainstream companies engage with blockchain technology. While early crypto adoption was driven largely by volatile assets, the current wave is centered on stablecoins as a functional medium of exchange. Major fintech firms are positioning dollar-backed tokens as a practical tool rather than a speculative asset.

Stripe has introduced stablecoin accounts and payouts to simplify global payments for platforms and creators. PayPal is expanding the use of its dollar-denominated token within its ecosystem, including creator payouts in the United States. Meanwhile, institutional settlement systems such as JPMorgan’s blockchain-based rails continue to gain traction among large financial players.

This evolution is also reshaping long-standing assumptions within the crypto market. As onchain dollars become more widely used, they are taking over roles once envisioned for Bitcoin in everyday payments and emerging markets. Some market observers have acknowledged that while Bitcoin remains compelling as a long-term store of value, it is stablecoins that are increasingly fulfilling the transactional use case.

Visa’s move highlights that distinction. By advising banks and fintechs on stablecoin strategy, the company is effectively endorsing tokenized dollars as the dominant form of blockchain-based money for payments.

In parallel, Bitcoin appears to be settling into a more clearly defined position as macro collateral and digital gold, rather than a day-to-day medium of exchange.

Source
Cointelegraph

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