Original author: angelilu, Foresight News
In 2018, Western Union conducted a small experiment. They integrated Ripple's cross-border payment product xRapid, using XRP tokens to settle exchanges between the US dollar and the Mexican peso. A total of 10 transactions were tested. After the test, the then CEO publicly stated: Too expensive, did not save any costs. The experiment was paused.
On April 3, 2026, Western Union announced the completion of the acquisition of the Singaporean digital wallet Dash. Dash was originally under Singapore Telecommunications, with 1.4 million users, supporting payments, remittances, savings, insurance, and investments, making it one of the most widely used all-in-one wallets in Singapore. This is the first digital wallet asset acquired by Western Union in the Asia-Pacific region.
Eight years, from "blockchain is too expensive" to issuing its own stablecoin on Solana and now starting to layout crypto wallets, Western Union is quietly undergoing a rebuild.
Western Union's 175 Years
Domestic users may rarely use Western Union and may not even be sure what the name represents. But in over 200 countries and regions worldwide, especially in immigrant communities in Southeast Asia, Latin America, and South Asia, Western Union is almost synonymous with "sending money."
It was founded in 1851, 20 years earlier than China's first telegraph line. It started as a telegraph business, building the first transcontinental telegraph line in the United States. In 1871, it began offering remittance services, using "telegraph transfers" to allow people, for the first time, to send money to another city without carrying cash or being physically present.
More than 170 years later, the core logic remains unchanged: Western Union maintains over 500,000 physical agent locations worldwide, mostly small supermarkets, convenience stores, and post offices. People walk in, fill out a form, hand cash to the counter, and the recipient can withdraw the money at another location. This network covers areas almost untouched by the banking system—immigrant workers without bank accounts, people without access to credit cards, and families in remote areas relying on remittances from relatives.
But this network is also Western Union's heaviest burden. The cost of maintaining 500,000 agent points accounts for about 60% of its service costs. Its core customer base—cash-dependent remittance senders—is being eroded by generations of digital-native products. Wise's cross-border transfer fees are 60% to 80% lower than Western Union's; Remitly's revenue reached $1.635 billion in 2025, a 29% year-on-year increase, with 9 million active users. Although Western Union's digital revenue is also growing, it still only accounts for 35% of total C2C revenue, with the vast majority of profits still from users who walk into physical locations and pull out cash.
Western Union is being caught up, and it knows it.
Moving Remittance Paths On-Chain with Stablecoins
In October 2025, Western Union announced it would issue the stablecoin USDPT on Solana, with the issuer being the US-licensed crypto bank Anchorage Digital. As of April 2026, USDPT has entered the actual deployment phase. At the same time, Western Union is building a "Digital Asset Network," connecting multiple on- and off-ramp platforms, aiming to allow users holding any mainstream crypto assets to exchange them for cash through Western Union's network.
A more specific landing scenario is its partnership with Rain to issue a Visa card linked to stablecoins. This card is designed for high-inflation countries, a Visa card tied to a US dollar stablecoin, specifically targeting countries like Argentina and Zimbabwe, where the local currency depreciates by tens or even hundreds of percentage points annually. Western Union CFO Matthew Cagwin mentioned at an industry conference, "Argentina's inflation exceeded 200% last year. After locals obtain US dollar stablecoins, they can directly spend at merchants or walk into Western Union locations to withdraw cash." The final step still relies on that network of 500,000 cash points.
Wallets Are the Real Battlefield
For the past 170-plus years, Western Union has played the role of a "pipeline" in remittances: money flows in from one end and out from the other, used and then gone. Users are not in Western Union's app, nor in Western Union's accounts; they are just passing through. What Wise and Remitly are taking is precisely that time users spend staying—people are getting used to keeping money in digital wallets, where transfers are just one action, not the entirety.
The acquisition of Dash is Western Union's first real attempt to keep users.
Dash was launched by Singapore Telecommunications in 2014 and is deeply embedded in Singapore's local life scenarios: paying utility bills, buying insurance, making small investments, and sending money to family overseas, all within one app. 1.4 million users represent a very high coverage rate for a city-state. More importantly, a large portion of these users are Southeast Asian immigrants working in Singapore, precisely Western Union's core customer group.
Western Union's previous way of reaching these people was to have them walk into convenience store counters. Now, it wants to move directly into their phones.
Dash brings not just users but also a front end for directly testing new products. After the USDPT stablecoin launches, one of the most natural distribution channels will be Dash's wallet interface; the stablecoin card for high-inflation markets also needs a trusted app to support it. Singapore, as a financial hub in Southeast Asia with a relatively mature regulatory environment, is the most suitable place for Western Union to first validate the logic before rolling out this suite of on-chain products across the Asia-Pacific region.








