- Key Insights: Stripe will issue Hyperliquid’s stablecoin.
- What’s at Stake: The payment fintech is battling banks to capture the market.
- Forward Look: Early Warning, other banks are planning stablecoins.
Non-banks have gotten a headstart on banks in the race to issue stablecoins, with Stripe replicating its early successes in digital payments.
Stripe’s Bridge stablecoin subsidiary this week won a bidding battle to issue USDH, a new stablecoin on Hyperliquid’s decentralized finance platform, which has reached a market cap of $16 billion in a year, or growth of 1,500% during that time.
Stripe, which did not return a request for comment,
“We have seen this kind of call to action before, where banks ‘needed to get involved’ in blockchain. But this feels different,” Richard Rosenthal, principal in Deloitte’s Risk & Financial Advisory practice, told American Banker, noting the quick growth of stablecoins and the vast future potential suggest banks need to make decisions on where they fit in the stablecoin market.
Same story
The apparent lack of banks in the Hyperliquid bidding resembles the early days of digital payments, where Stripe, Block, PayPal and other payment fintechs
Stripe in May issued dozens of new payment products, focusing on
Read more about Stripe.
“There seems to be a glut of stablecoin providers, but most won’t matter as the market will consolidate around those with distribution. That’s where Stripe’s efforts are important. It already sits in the flow of merchant and consumer payments,” James Wester, director of cryptocurrency for Javelin Strategy & Research, told American Banker.
Stripe’s position gives its tokens real retail adoption potential, according to Wester. “It’s less clear on the commercial or capital markets side, but it still demonstrates to banks the real competitive issue, which is stablecoins moving from niche crypto plumbing into mainstream payments infrastructure.”
Tipping the scales
While crypto companies and payment technology firms issue most stablecoins, the
Financial technology seller Fiserv is also
Fiserv’s FIUSD will be part of Fiserv’s banking and payments menu by the end of 2025 and will be interoperable with PayPal’s PYUSD. That could open stablecoins to thousands of financial institutions and PayPal’s base of more than 430 million consumers and 36 million merchants.
The open question around stablecoin is who will reach the scale necessary to drive mass adoption, Tony DeSanctis, senior director at Cornerstone Advisors, told American Banker.
“Tether, PayPal, and now Stripe are all trying to become the primary stablecoin rail to drive the market,” DeSanctis said. “With the market cap for stablecoins increasing from $200 billion to $2 trillion in the next couple of years, new players have a chance to see significant growth. The question remains how many new players will be necessary in a market that already processes billions a day in transactions.”
The potential size of the stablecoin payment market and the pace at which fintechs are pursuing the market, will push banks to make quick decisions, according to Rosenthal. “It could be disruptive for banks because these non-banks could offer better terms or incentives.”
Banks will need to weigh the needs of their clients and their own strategy when pursuing custodial services, lending, payments or other stablecoin products, Rosenthal said, adding impetus to make these decisions soon.
“You have a lot of fintechs and non-banks that have built market share,” Rosenthal said. “The move to stablecoins is happening very quickly.”