The payment industry may seem "old," but it has always been the earliest and most easily restructured part of the financial system by technology. While the marketThe payment industry may seem "old," but it has always been the earliest and most easily restructured part of the financial system by technology. While the market

The On-Chain Battle of Payment Giants: A Fight for the $40 Trillion Settlement Layer

2025/12/18 18:00

The payment industry may seem "old," but it has always been the earliest and most easily restructured part of the financial system by technology.

While the market is still debating whether cryptocurrency is an asset, the two payment giants, Visa and Mastercard, have reached a consensus on a more fundamental engineering issue: Is there a more efficient settlement layer that can be embedded in the existing payment system instead of starting from scratch?

The answer is stablecoins.

Recently, Visa announced that it is opening up USDC settlement to banks in the United States through Solana; previously, Mastercard partnered with Ripple to test RLUSD-based transaction settlement on XRPL.

This is not a short-term pilot program, but rather a clear signal that global payment infrastructure is beginning to migrate to a new generation of settlement layers.

Visa: Turning stablecoins into a "settlement plugin"

Visa's actions may appear cutting-edge, but its underlying logic remains highly restrained.

Instead of building its own closed blockchain system, it directly integrated the Solana network and USDC stablecoin into its own settlement backend as an available option in the existing clearing process.

Key data: Within the United States, institutions such as Cross River Bank have begun using USDC for settlements through Solana. Visa has disclosed an annualized settlement rate exceeding $3.5 billion.

Seamless experience: For consumers, the card-swiping experience remains unchanged.

For banks, this change is extremely intuitive: the T+1 / T+2 clearing cycle that originally relied on working days has been compressed into continuous settlement 24/7, significantly reducing the time funds are in transit and liquidity occupation.

It's worth noting that Visa did not package this capability as a "financial paradigm shift" or a "disruptive innovation." Instead, it repeatedly emphasized standardization and productization—viewing stablecoin settlement as a deployable and replicable foundational capability.

This also explains why Visa recently launched a stablecoin advisory service: its goal is not to push banks to "go crypto," but to help them understand and access next-generation settlement tools.

In this system, stablecoins are not independent financial products, but rather more like basic modules embedded in the payment network.

Mastercard: Building a "Compliance Connection Layer"

Unlike Visa's "direct connection to public blockchains," Mastercard has chosen a more complex path of "strategic alliances and mergers."

Multi-chain collaboration: Instead of betting on a single path, it collaborates with Ripple (XRPL), Gemini, and Middle Eastern institutions.

Compliance puzzle: It tends to build a "pluggable compliance connection layer".

Mastercard's self-positioning is very clear: it does not attempt to become an extension of any public chain, but rather places itself at the interface between the traditional financial system and on-chain settlement networks.

The core advantage of this architecture lies in its flexibility—regardless of which stablecoin or technological path becomes mainstream in the future, Mastercard can quickly integrate through connectivity and adaptation. This model is particularly suitable for complex scenarios with high compliance requirements, such as cross-border payments, B2B settlements, and RWA.

The battle over the settlement layer points to a redistribution of $40 trillion.

Despite their different management paths, Visa and Mastercard are highly consistent on a key judgment.

What they are really concerned about is not the growth in the size of a single stablecoin, but whether future settlement activities will break away from the existing payment network and complete a closed loop on a new technology layer.

Once fund transfers can be settled peer-to-peer on the blockchain, the intermediary value of traditional clearing networks will be reassessed. This is precisely why the two major card organizations must get involved early and clarify their own positions.

The claim in Visa's latest report that "stablecoins may reshape the global $40 trillion credit market" is not simply a narrative about scale, but a structural judgment: when settlement tools become programmable, the underlying logic of credit issuance, risk control, and fund allocation will all be adjusted accordingly.

Whoever controls the settlement layer is closer to defining the next generation of rules for fund flows.

This is a revolution that is happening outside the public eye.

It's not a user-facing celebration, but a technological migration happening in the backend system: quiet, gradual, but once completed, almost irreversible.

When the world’s largest payment network begins to regard on-chain settlement as a fundamental capability, blockchain is no longer an external variable of the financial system, but is becoming part of its internal engineering.

Payments appear to be proceeding as usual, but the underlying settlement logic is entering a new technological phase.

Market Opportunity
Solayer Logo
Solayer Price(LAYER)
$0.1682
$0.1682$0.1682
-1.57%
USD
Solayer (LAYER) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

U.S. Court Finds Pastor Found Guilty in $3M Crypto Scam

U.S. Court Finds Pastor Found Guilty in $3M Crypto Scam

The post U.S. Court Finds Pastor Found Guilty in $3M Crypto Scam appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Crime 18 September 2025 | 04:05 A Colorado judge has brought closure to one of the state’s most unusual cryptocurrency scandals, declaring INDXcoin to be a fraudulent operation and ordering its founders, Denver pastor Eli Regalado and his wife Kaitlyn, to repay $3.34 million. The ruling, issued by District Court Judge Heidi L. Kutcher, came nearly two years after the couple persuaded hundreds of people to invest in their token, promising safety and abundance through a Christian-branded platform called the Kingdom Wealth Exchange. The scheme ran between June 2022 and April 2023 and drew in more than 300 participants, many of them members of local church networks. Marketing materials portrayed INDXcoin as a low-risk gateway to prosperity, yet the project unraveled almost immediately. The exchange itself collapsed within 24 hours of launch, wiping out investors’ money. Despite this failure—and despite an auditor’s damning review that gave the system a “0 out of 10” for security—the Regalados kept presenting it as a solid opportunity. Colorado regulators argued that the couple’s faith-based appeal was central to the fraud. Securities Commissioner Tung Chan said the Regalados “dressed an old scam in new technology” and used their standing within the Christian community to convince people who had little knowledge of crypto. For him, the case illustrates how modern digital assets can be exploited to replicate classic Ponzi-style tactics under a different name. Court filings revealed where much of the money ended up: luxury goods, vacations, jewelry, a Range Rover, high-end clothing, and even dental procedures. In a video that drew worldwide attention earlier this year, Eli Regalado admitted the funds had been spent, explaining that a portion went to taxes while the remainder was used for a home renovation he claimed was divinely inspired. The judgment not only confirms that INDXcoin qualifies as a…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 09:14
MSCI’s Proposal May Trigger $15B Crypto Outflows

MSCI’s Proposal May Trigger $15B Crypto Outflows

MSCI's plan to exclude crypto-treasury companies could cause $15B outflows, impacting major firms.
Share
CoinLive2025/12/19 13:17
This U.S. politician’s suspicious stock trade just returned over 200% in weeks

This U.S. politician’s suspicious stock trade just returned over 200% in weeks

The post This U.S. politician’s suspicious stock trade just returned over 200% in weeks appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. United States Representative Cloe Fields has seen his stake in Opendoor Technologies (NASDAQ: OPEN) stock return over 200% in just a matter of weeks. According to congressional trade filings, the lawmaker purchased a stake in the online real estate company on July 21, 2025, investing between $1,001 and $15,000. At the time, the stock was trading around $2 and had been largely stagnant for months. Receive Signals on US Congress Members’ Stock Trades Stocks Stay up-to-date on the trading activity of US Congress members. The signal triggers based on updates from the House disclosure reports, notifying you of their latest stock transactions. Enable signal The trade has since paid off, with Opendoor surging to $10, a gain of nearly 220% in under two months. By comparison, the broader S&P 500 index rose less than 5% during the same period. OPEN one-week stock price chart. Source: Finbold Assuming he invested a minimum of $1,001, the purchase would now be worth about $3,200, while a $15,000 stake would have grown to nearly $48,000, generating profits of roughly $2,200 and $33,000, respectively. OPEN’s stock rally Notably, Opendoor’s rally has been fueled by major corporate shifts and market speculation. For instance, in August, the company named former Shopify COO Kaz Nejatian as CEO, while co-founders Keith Rabois and Eric Wu rejoined the board, moves seen as a return to the company’s early innovative spirit.  Outgoing CEO Carrie Wheeler’s resignation and sale of millions in stock reinforced the sense of a new chapter. Beyond leadership changes, Opendoor’s surge has taken on meme-stock characteristics. In this case, retail investors piled in as shares climbed, while short sellers scrambled to cover, pushing prices higher.  However, the stock is still not without challenges, where its iBuying model is untested at scale, margins are thin, and debt tied to…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 04:02