Western Union Bets On Stablecoins With USDPT May Launch

bitcoinistPublicado em 2026-04-28Última atualização em 2026-04-28

Western Union is about to add its first partner to a digital asset network designed to let crypto move through its global payment system and convert into local cash at more than 360,000 collection points around the world.

Western Union Plants Its Flag In Digital Payments

That network — called DAN, short for Digital Asset Network — sits at the center of a broader push by the 175-year-old money transfer company to make digital assets a permanent part of how it moves money.

At the core of the effort is USDPT, a US dollar-backed stablecoin the company first announced in October 2025. Built on the Solana blockchain and issued by Anchorage Digital Bank, USDPT is now in its final stages of preparation, with a live launch expected in May.

President and CEO Devin McGranahan made the timeline clear during the company’s first-quarter earnings call Friday. “It is no longer a question of if Western Union will be active in digital assets,” he said. “It is now how fast can we scale.”

Exchange partners will handle access, conversion, and distribution of USDPT. Banking and financial institution partners in key corridors will manage direct settlement and treasury functions.

McGranahan said the combined partner pipeline reaches tens of millions of crypto wallets globally — a distribution channel he described as a direct solution to moving from crypto to cash safely and at scale.

A Stablecoin Market Already Worth $320 Billion

Western Union is entering a market dominated by two players. Tether’s USDT holds a market cap above $189 billion. Circle’s USDC follows at $77 billion. Sky Dollar sits a distant third at $8 billion, according to DeFi analytics platform DefiLlama. US dollar-denominated stablecoins account for the vast majority of the $320 billion total stablecoin market.

Total crypto market cap currently at $2.57 trillion. Chart: TradingView

Western Union isn’t positioning USDPT as a rival to those giants. The token is intended to serve as the backbone of its own payment and settlement infrastructure — not a standalone financial product.

Reports indicate that banks and corporations across Europe are also actively selecting infrastructure partners as stablecoin adoption picks up among traditional financial institutions.

Stable Card And Broader Ambitions Round Out The Plan

Beyond USDPT and DAN, Western Union plans to launch a US dollar stable card later this year. The card would allow users to hold and spend stablecoins directly.

McGranahan said the path forward is focused on scaling adoption and embedding digital assets more deeply into Western Union’s core money movement platform.

Featured image from flick, chart from TradingView

Leituras Relacionadas

The "Impossible Triad" Is Fundamentally a Pseudo-Problem

The article argues that blockchain's fundamental limitation is not the scalability trilemma (decentralization, scalability, security), which has been largely solved, but the lack of **privacy** and, until recently, clear **legitimacy**. Blockchain is described as a slow, expensive, globally shared computer whose core value is censorship resistance and verifiability. While ideal for native digital assets like money (e.g., stablecoins), its default transparency acts as a **tax**, exposing all transactions and enabling MEV extraction, which deters serious institutional capital. Simultaneously, its permissionless nature created regulatory ambiguity. The piece contends that **privacy** is the missing critical feature. It rejects the false choice between total transparency and complete anonymity. Modern cryptography (like zero-knowledge proofs) enables **compliant privacy**: users can prove facts (solvency, KYC status, compliance) without revealing the underlying sensitive data (specific holdings, identities). This preserves auditability for regulators and eliminates the leak of financial information. With recent regulatory progress (e.g., the GENIUS Act) addressing legitimacy, adding default, provably compliant privacy becomes a pure upgrade. It transforms blockchain from a costly, public ledger into a confidential settlement layer, finally bridging the gap to mainstream institutional and individual adoption of on-chain finance.

链捕手Há 11h

The "Impossible Triad" Is Fundamentally a Pseudo-Problem

链捕手Há 11h

Optical Chips: Collective Capacity Expansion

The global optical chip industry is experiencing a massive wave of expansion driven by surging AI data center demand. Major players across the US, Japan, Europe, and China are aggressively investing to ramp up production capacity. In the US, Coherent is expanding its 6-inch Indium Phosphide (InP) semiconductor fab in Texas, supported by CHIPS Act funding and a $2 billion strategic investment from NVIDIA. Lumentum is building a new factory for InP optical devices, and Nokia is scaling its advanced photonic chip packaging and testing capabilities. NVIDIA's investments aim to secure future supply of critical lasers and optical interconnect products for AI infrastructure. Japan's JX Advanced Metals, a leading InP substrate supplier, plans a multi-billion yen investment to increase its capacity 7-10 times, strengthening its grip on the crucial upstream materials market. In Europe, IQE and Tower Semiconductor settled a patent dispute and signed a multi-year InP epitaxial wafer supply agreement, highlighting that next-generation silicon photonics platforms will integrate high-performance InP components. STMicroelectronics and Sivers Semiconductors are also expanding silicon photonics production and partnerships. China is rapidly building out its domestic supply chain. Dongshan Precision's subsidiary, Source Photonics, announced a $12 billion project to expand optical chip and module production. Companies like Sanan Optoelectronics and Yunnan Germanium are scaling up InP chip manufacturing and substrate production, moving towards vertical integration from materials to modules. While debate continues around the exact future architecture—whether CPO (Co-Packaged Optics), NPO, or pluggables will dominate—analysts like Morgan Stanley argue the underlying driver is unchangeable: the explosive growth in bandwidth demand. This will inevitably increase the volume of optical engines, lasers, and related content per GPU, regardless of the final technical path. The competition for "more light" in the AI era has intensified into a global, full-chain capacity race.

marsbitHá 13h

Optical Chips: Collective Capacity Expansion

marsbitHá 13h

Trading

Spot
Futuros
活动图片