Why Stablecoins Are Becoming the Preferred Way to Move Money Globally
Global payments run on a contradiction. A company can approve a seven-figure purchase from a phone and watch inventory cross three continents in real time. Paying a supplier in another country still threads through correspondent banks, business hours, manual reviews, and reconciliation routines designed decades ago.
The slow part is rarely the technology. It is the plumbing wrapped around it.
That gap explains why stablecoins have moved from the edge of crypto trading into treasury and cross-border payment conversations inside large companies. Federal Reserve data put stablecoin market value at $317 billion in April 2026, after growth of more than 50% during 2025. The World Economic Forum estimated that stablecoins settled over $27 trillion in 2024, more than Visa and Mastercard combined.
At that size they are not a crypto experiment, but a money-movement layer that payment firms, banks, and multinationals are now expected to understand. Growth above 50% in a single year is not how a niche tool behaves.
One obvious read is that stablecoins move money faster. The more useful read is that they expose where the old system actually slows down.
The payment was never the slow part
When a cross-border payment lands late, most teams blame the transfer. That transfer is usually the easy part.
Look at the numbers behind the complaint. The Bank for International Settlements, citing FSB progress reporting, measured cross-border speed against the G20's own goals. Only 35% of retail and 55% of wholesale payments arrived within an hour, against a 75% target. In other words, the wire was never the real bottleneck.
Delay lives in the work around the transfer. Counterparty checks, liquidity sourcing, currency conversion, clearing windows, and reconciliation all run before anyone calls a payment complete.
Stablecoins compress one of those steps. Tokenised dollars move directly across networks that never close, so settlement stops waiting on a chain of intermediaries.
Moving the token is not the same as completing the payment. Someone has to screen the wallet, clear sanctions checks, redeem at par, record the rate, and deliver usable local currency to the recipient. As the Fed's Kyoungjin Kim has observed, the chain leg can finish in seconds while the rest of the workflow does not.
Practitioners now separate two things. Settlement describes how value travels, while money movement covers everything required before that value counts as clean, compliant, and spendable inside a business.
Stablecoins improve the first part of that journey. Organisations still have to rebuild the second.
The stablecoin money-movement stack
Mature teams have stopped treating a stablecoin payment as a single transaction. They treat it as a connected sequence instead, and it helps to name the model.
A useful way to see it is the stablecoin money-movement stack, seven layers where weakness in any one surfaces somewhere downstream.
The first three layers set the foundation. Asset selection asks which coin clears the bar on reserve quality, redemption rights, and liquidity. Chain selection weighs transaction cost, network resilience, and fit with the intended corridor. Custody settles who actually holds the assets, whether a qualified custodian, an exchange, an MPC wallet that splits key control across parties, or an internal treasury desk.
Compliance comes next, the layer that turns a token transfer into a commercial payment. Wallet screening, sanctions controls, and counterparty attribution decide whether money can legally move at all. So do Travel Rule obligations, the duty to pass originator and beneficiary details alongside each transfer.
Liquidity follows, and it is what turns a digital balance into working capital, through redemption partners and enough currency depth to convert at need.
Then comes the least visible layer, and often the most labour-intensive. Every payment has to reconcile against invoices, tax records, exchange rates, and the ledger. Faster settlement earns very little if month-end close gets harder.
No single layer looks like much on its own. Taken together, they explain why the strongest programmes resemble payment-redesign projects rather than crypto launches.
Ownership decides the outcome
Ask why stablecoin projects stall and most people name regulation, technology, or volatility. Implementation teams keep landing somewhere quieter. Ownership.
A cross-border stablecoin payment crosses boundaries that ordinary payments rarely touch all at once. Product owns the customer flow, engineering owns the wallets, treasury owns reserves and redemption, compliance owns AML and sanctions controls, finance owns reconciliation, and legal owns licensing.
Each function does its job. Very few own the workflow that runs through all of them. Projects clear pilots because every department succeeds in isolation, then hit friction in production when nobody connects the parts into one accountable process.
This cost is not abstract. TRM Labs put illicit-entity stablecoin flows at roughly $141 billion in 2025, with monthly volume crossing $1 trillion several times, a heavy load on screening, monitoring, and case management. When the compliance bill grows that fast, treating the blockchain as the hard problem misreads where the money and the risk actually sit.
Chainalysis implementation guidance reaches the same conclusion. Stablecoins need a single cross-functional owner spanning treasury, compliance, legal, and engineering before volume climbs, not after. Governance here does not slow innovation. It lets innovation survive contact with production.
Regulation is turning from brake into trigger
For years the market read regulation as the obstacle. That reading is ageing badly.
Large companies do not avoid stablecoins because rules exist. They hesitate when the rules are unclear, since a treasury committee cannot approve a payment programme without settled redemption rights and reserve disclosure.
Clarity is arriving fast, and for an enterprise buyer it matters more than any gain in blockchain throughput. The US GENIUS Act created a federal regime for payment stablecoins, the EU's MiCA rules are already in force, and the UK finalised its sterling-backed regime in June 2026.
Clearer is not yet consistent, though. The Financial Stability Board found significant gaps and inconsistencies across jurisdictions, which leaves global cross-border programmes navigating different licensing, disclosure, and AML rules corridor by corridor.
The rail is going global while the rules around it stay local. For many firms, jurisdictional strategy is becoming part of payment strategy, and possibly the next real advantage.
Stablecoins are not replacing banks
Headlines predicting that stablecoins will replace banks tend to overlook what banks actually do. Banks create credit, safeguard deposits, manage liquidity, and provide regulated access to domestic payment systems. Settling more than $27 trillion in a year does not touch any of that work.
What they improve is the movement of value between parties, and little else. That single stretch of the financial system has barely changed in decades.
The trade-offs deserve the same honesty. In weak-currency markets, easy access to digital dollars helps users, yet the IMF and BIS warn it can deepen dollarisation and strain monetary sovereignty.
Reserves carry consequences too. BIS research links stablecoin reserve flows to short-term US Treasury yields, so payment adoption now reaches into government-debt markets.
None of this is fatal. It confirms that the winners will run several rails at once, picking the right one for each corridor. That flexibility is far tougher to copy than a blockchain integration, because holding consistent governance, compliance, and liquidity control across every rail is the genuinely hard task.
The new advantage is operational, not technical
For years firms measured payments by settlement time, wire fees, and currency spread, because those were the levers banks exposed. Stablecoins widen the question.
A payment that settles instantly but sits trapped inside an exchange account has not improved working capital. A cheap transfer that throws reconciliation exceptions can cost more than it saves.
So the sharpest teams are changing what they count. They stop asking how fast value moves. They ask how fast it becomes usable. Then they price the whole corridor, from liquidity and conversion through reconciliation, compliance review, and exception handling, not the on-chain fee alone.
Technology keeps getting easier to buy. Operational discipline keeps getting harder to replicate, and that is where the gap between experimenting and operating now opens.
Stablecoins are winning because they fix problems businesses live with every day, not problems the technology imagined for them. Even so, every faster payment still needs governance, liquidity, compliance, and trust.
Over the coming decade, the leaders will not be the firms with the fastest chain or the lowest fee. They will be the ones that recognise a plain operational truth.
Moving money has become easy. Managing its movement has not. That is the discipline that now pays.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are stablecoins gaining traction in global payments?
They cut settlement friction and let value move continuously, around the clock, without a chain of correspondent banks. The pull reflects demand for better cross-border money movement rather than interest in crypto itself, which is why payment firms and banks are now building with them directly.
Are stablecoins right for every international payment?
No. Their value depends on the corridor, the regulatory position, liquidity, and operational fit. Some routes settle better through conventional banking, while slow or expensive corridors gain the most from stablecoin settlement.
What is the hardest part of implementing stablecoins?
Rarely the blockchain. The difficulty is governance, covering issuer approval, custody, compliance, liquidity, and reconciliation, and assigning one owner for a workflow that spans treasury, compliance, finance, legal, and engineering.
How does regulation affect enterprise adoption?
Clear regulatory rules on reserves, redemption, and disclosure remove the uncertainty that stalls treasury sign-off. The GENIUS Act, MiCA, and the UK's 2026 regime let firms treat stablecoins as durable payment rails rather than an experiment, though fragmentation across jurisdictions still adds review work.
What separates successful stablecoin programmes?
Successful teams start from a business problem, not a token. They define the use case, assign clear ownership, build compliance into the workflow from day one, and judge success by time to usable funds, total corridor cost, failed-payout rate, and reconciliation accuracy, not settlement speed alone.
