Stablecoin payments soar past $5T while FX fees fall behind

Stablecoin transaction volumes have reached a significant inflection point, surpassing $5 trillion across approximately one billion payments throughout 2024, according to data compiled by Visa and blockchain analytics firm Allium. The milestone underscores a fundamental shift in how digital assets are being deployed for payments, moving beyond speculative trading into practical settlement infrastructure.

Since the U.S. presidential election in November, the combined market value of major stablecoins has climbed to $255 billion—a gain of roughly 47 percent. Market observers attribute the acceleration to three converging factors: renewed investor confidence in digital assets, improving regulatory frameworks, and expanding corporate adoption of blockchain-based payment rails.

Industry Context and Market Scale

The stablecoin market emerged roughly a decade ago as a response to inherent limitations in cryptocurrency ecosystems. Bitcoin’s extreme volatility made it unsuitable for commerce. Traditional payment processors required days to settle international transfers. Stablecoins—digital assets pegged to fiat currencies or commodity baskets—promised to bridge these gaps by combining blockchain’s settlement speed with currency stability.

Today, the stablecoin market encompasses multiple issuers and technical approaches. USDC, issued by Circle, represents one institutional-grade offering backed by dollar reserves and subject to regular attestations. Tether’s USDT dominates by volume, though it has faced periodic questions regarding reserve composition and issuer transparency. Newer entrants including PayPal’s PYUSD and emerging central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) are reshaping the competitive landscape.

The $255 billion market capitalization, while substantial, remains modest relative to the global payments ecosystem. Annual cross-border remittances alone exceed $800 billion. International trade settlement volumes reach trillions daily. This context suggests stablecoins currently represent emerging infrastructure rather than incumbent disruption—significant enough to warrant attention from major financial institutions, but not yet large enough to fundamentally alter global payment patterns.

The one billion payments milestone carries particular significance because it demonstrates adoption breadth. Transaction counts matter as much as transaction values in assessing whether technology is becoming integral infrastructure or remaining a niche tool. One billion payments suggests meaningful integration across retail, wholesale, and institutional user bases.

The Promise vs. the Reality

Stablecoins were explicitly designed to address longstanding inefficiencies in global payments. Speed is one genuine advantage. In jurisdictions historically underserved by traditional banking infrastructure, transactions that previously required multiple days can now settle in minutes. This capability opens economic opportunity for both individuals and businesses in markets where access to reliable payment networks remains limited.

Stablecoins are finally delivering on their long-touted promise: offering a faster, simpler, and cheaper alternative to outdated payment systems.

— Allium, Blockchain Analytics Firm

Cost reduction, however, tells a more complicated story. Despite technological innovation, stablecoins have not eliminated the hidden expenses embedded in foreign exchange conversion. When a payment crosses currency borders—whether euros converting to Hong Kong dollars or any other pairing—multiple layers of friction persist. Spreads, conversion fees, intermediary margins, and market slippage all add up.

The problem intensifies during on-ramps and off-ramps, when cryptocurrency must transition into traditional banking rails. These gateway moments carry their own transaction costs that blockchain technology alone cannot eliminate. The structure of global currency markets means that some costs are inherent to the system itself.

Key Context

Foreign exchange revenue remains a primary profit center for traditional banks and payment providers. This structural incentive means institutions have limited motivation to disrupt the pricing model that stablecoins theoretically promise to undercut. Global banks earn an estimated $150-200 billion annually from foreign exchange services, creating powerful resistance to cost compression.

The FX Ceiling

Mike Robertson, chief executive of FX infrastructure provider AbbeyCross, offers a blunt assessment of the stablecoin industry’s blind spots. The sector frequently operates under the assumption that better technology can eliminate all inefficiency—a perspective Robertson characterizes as fundamentally naive when applied to currency conversion.

Each currency operates under different dynamics. If money is being made in a particular area, its value remains.

— Mike Robertson, CEO, AbbeyCross

Currency values reflect economic realities specific to each jurisdiction. Those realities do not disappear because transactions now occur on a blockchain. Traditional financial institutions have built substantial revenue streams around foreign exchange pricing. Most banks earn considerably more from FX than from transaction processing fees alone. This structural revenue model creates persistent resistance to the cost compression that stablecoins promise.

For stablecoins to achieve their stated goal of genuinely cheap cross-border payments, the industry must contend with economics, not merely technology. The foreign exchange market operates on margins that reflect currency risk, liquidity management, and regulatory capital requirements. A stablecoin issuer cannot arbitrarily eliminate these costs—they can only redistribute them across different stakeholders in the payment chain.

Regulatory entities in major jurisdictions are increasingly requiring stablecoin issuers to maintain reserves and satisfy disclosure requirements that themselves carry operational costs. These compliance expenses ultimately flow through to end users, even if the blockchain layer itself executes transfers more efficiently than traditional banking rails.

Targeting Underserved Routes

Some emerging payment companies are pursuing a more pragmatic strategy. Rather than attempting to displace established corridors dominated by traditional banking, they are focusing on routes that existing networks have historically neglected or underserved.

London-based payments startup BVNK concentrates on “exotic” payment corridors—transfers between markets like Sri Lanka and Cambodia. These routes typically require multiple intermediaries, extending settlement timelines and inflating costs. Sagar Sarbhai, the firm’s Asia-Pacific managing director, notes that stablecoins streamline the process by reducing intermediary layers, even if absolute costs have not collapsed to zero.

BVNK currently processes approximately $15 billion in annual transaction volume. The firm’s focus reflects a market reality: improvements in speed and capital efficiency can create significant value even when pricing has not fundamentally reset. For businesses conducting international operations across Southeast Asia, reductions in settlement time from five business days to hours represent material operational improvements, regardless of absolute basis points saved.

Singapore-based Thunes and Toronto-headquartered Aquanow are pursuing similar models. Both companies are building bridges between blockchain settlement and “last mile” conversion into local currencies and consumer wallets. Their approach involves partnerships with stablecoin issuers and larger corporate entities that have sufficient transaction volume to justify infrastructure investment.

This market segmentation suggests a durable role for stablecoins: not replacing traditional finance wholesale, but optimizing specific corridors where blockchain’s advantages outweigh its limitations. Companies targeting annual volumes of $10-50 billion find product-market fit through this focused approach.

Market Development

Companies targeting underserved corridors are finding product-market fit not by competing on absolute price, but by delivering meaningful improvements in speed, transparency, and capital efficiency relative to alternatives available in those specific markets. This pragmatic positioning suggests the stablecoin market will mature through niche optimization rather than universal displacement of legacy systems.

Regulation as Catalyst

The regulatory environment has begun shifting in ways that could accelerate institutional adoption of stablecoins. The GENIUS Act, signed into U.S. law on July 18, 2025, established a federal framework for stablecoin oversight. The legislation provides legal certainty that institutional investors and financial institutions have long demanded before committing substantial capital.

Parallel legislative efforts are advancing in both the House and Senate, introducing additional proposals that would provide federal assurance mechanisms for stablecoin issuance and redemption. Circle, the issuer of USDC, has been closely monitoring these regulatory developments through its Secure team.

Clear regulatory pathways reduce legal uncertainty and encourage financial institutions to participate in stablecoin infrastructure. This institutional participation represents a qualitative shift—moving stablecoins from primarily retail and speculative use cases toward settlement infrastructure that major financial players can integrate into their operations. Banks can now justify technology investments in blockchain infrastructure when regulatory frameworks provide clear guardrails for compliance.

The convergence of regulatory clarity, expanding transaction volumes, and targeted product development suggests the stablecoin market is entering a more mature phase. The $5 trillion volume milestone and 47 percent year-over-year growth in stablecoin market capitalization indicate sustained institutional and retail engagement. However, the persistence of foreign exchange costs reminds participants that technology cannot unilaterally resolve economic incentives embedded in global financial systems. Progress will likely remain incremental rather than transformative, with stablecoins becoming an essential component of hybrid payment networks rather than wholesale replacements for traditional banking infrastructure.

For current developments in this space, track Ethereum and other blockchain platforms driving stablecoin innovation, as well as ongoing cryptocurrency market developments that shape institutional participation.

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