Fiserv Partners with Paxos and Circle to Launch Game-Changing FIUSD Stablecoin on Solana
Wall Street meets crypto—again. Fiserv just dropped a bombshell by teaming up with Paxos and Circle to roll out its FIUSD stablecoin on Solana’s blazing-fast blockchain.
Why it matters: Traditional finance keeps dipping its toes into crypto waters, and this time it’s a trillion-dollar player making waves. Fiserv’s move signals institutional adoption isn’t slowing down—it’s accelerating.
The Solana advantage: With sub-second finality and dirt-cheap transactions, Solana’s the perfect runway for FIUSD’s takeoff. Forget Ethereum’s gas fees—this stablecoin’s built for speed.
Behind the scenes: Paxos brings its regulatory chops, Circle contributes USDC muscle, and Fiserv? They’re betting big that your grandma will be using their stablecoin before she understands what a blockchain is.
The bottom line: Another brick in crypto’s wall of legitimacy—or just banks doing what banks do best: copying innovation and slapping their brand on it. Either way, the stablecoin wars just got hotter.
Solana will be the first blockchain to host FIUSD
Initially, FIUSD will launch on Solana, while Fiserv announced it would explore partnerships with other public blockchains. Solana already carries USDC, relying on the fully regulated stablecoin for worldwide acceptance and trading access. The chain carries over 11B in stablecoin liquidity, mostly used for crypto native trading.
Fiserv’s MOVE follows the advancement of the US Genius Act, offering more favorable regulations for stablecoins. Other payment companies like Stripe or large tech corporations have also explored the addition of stablecoins to their stack.
“With our scale, reach, and technology leadership, Fiserv is uniquely positioned to advance stablecoin-powered payments and help democratize access to blockchain financial services. Together with our other cloud-native banking and merchant platforms, we believe FIUSD will provide our clients with the efficiency and optionality they need to thrive in the evolving banking and payments ecosystem,” said Takis Georgakopoulos, COO of Fiserv.
FIUSD will be tailored to the needs of 10,000 financial institutional clients and millions of merchant locations.
Fiserv’s stablecoin will be able to carry a part of the $90B in annual transactions, due to the asset’s speed and scalability. It also announced that the new stablecoin will not add to processing costs for clients.
Following the stablecoin announcement, FI traded at $163.38, in the middle of its range for the past 12 months.
Fiserv to offer stablecoins to institutional clients
The FIUSD stablecoin will target the needs of large-scale institutional clients and use Paxos’s fully regulated approach to issue and distribute the asset. The partnership arrives just days after the launch of Paxos Labs, a platform for creating third-party branded stablecoins.
Circle will further partner with Fiserv to embed the new stablecoin into merchant sites and payment gateways, similar to other fintech solutions.
Fiserv’s stablecoin was announced soon after JP Morgan Chase patented its own JPMD stablecoin for large-scale clients with bank deposits. Unlike JP Morgan, FIUSD will work directly for live payments, instead of running a sandbox program.
Similar to JP Morgan Chase, Fiserv will also explore the offerings of tokenized deposits, which differ from stablecoins in that they reflect balances in the bank’s own books. Tokenized deposits can give banks more flexibility in asset transfers.
Stablecoins have been proposed as a tool for 24/7 transfers and for streamlining business processes where other tools are unavailable.
Stablecoins as a whole have expanded to a new peak of $247.2B, encompassing a mix of tokens backed by US treasuries, bank deposits, or by other crypto assets. Stablecoins remain a key payment tool and are now more widely used by online merchants.
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