US Capital Bets Big on Latin America: Wagering Not on Growth, but on the 'Key Nodes' of the Financial System

marsbitОпубликовано 2026-03-19Обновлено 2026-03-19

Введение

U.S. capital is increasingly investing in Latin America, focusing not on traditional growth but on controlling key nodes in the financial system. The region’s financial friction—high inflation, costly cross-border payments, and underdeveloped banking infrastructure—has created strong demand for digital payment and dollarized solutions. Stablecoins like USDC and USDT are being used to facilitate low-cost remittances, hedge against currency devaluation, and enable faster enterprise transactions. For instance, in Argentina, users leverage stablecoins for arbitrage amid tight currency controls, while in Mexico, families receive remittances via WhatsApp in minutes at under 1% cost. Major players like Visa are acquiring local payment platforms, and venture firms like ARQ are building bridges between traditional banking and crypto-based systems. With high digital payment adoption but persistent gaps in cross-border and dollar services, Latin America offers both proven demand and growth potential. However, the market requires deep local expertise and regulatory navigation, making it a complex but high-value opportunity for those who can build scalable, compliant financial infrastructure.

Author: Zen, PANews

Stockbroker Ruben López from Buenos Aires spends a few minutes every morning completing a special "daily operation": he exchanges his Argentine pesos for US dollars at the official exchange rate, then immediately converts the dollars into the US dollar-pegged stablecoin USDC on a trading platform, and finally exchanges the stablecoin back to pesos using the parallel market exchange rate.

Coinciding with the approaching Argentine mid-term elections, Argentine President Javier Milei tightened foreign exchange controls to support the peso exchange rate. Yet, Ruben spends no more than 10 minutes each day to steadily earn an arbitrage profit of about 4%.

Meanwhile, Mexican immigrants living in the US open WhatsApp, send a few messages, attach the stablecoin USDC, and their families in Guanajuato can receive the funds settled in Mexican pesos on their phones within two minutes.

Over the past few years, Latin America, long regarded as a region of high volatility, high risk, and high uncertainty, is increasingly being seen by US payment giants, venture capital funds, and stablecoin startups as a crucial battleground for the next round of financial infrastructure restructuring.

In February 2026, Visa announced its acquisition of the Argentine payment platforms Prisma and Newpay from Advent International to strengthen its digital payment and infrastructure capabilities in Argentina. In March, ARQ, a Latin American financial application focused on stablecoins, disclosed the completion of a $70 million funding round with participation from Sequoia Capital and Founders Fund, among others. ARQ has built infrastructure connecting traditional banking networks with stablecoin-based payment systems, enabling users to hold and transact in foreign currencies.

Looking at these cases together, it's clear that US capital is not just focusing on a single high-growth company, but is preemptively occupying the key nodes in the restructuring of Latin America's financial system: whoever controls the payment entry points, clearing networks, account relationships, and dollarized store-of-value tools will have a better chance of gaining the initiative in the next phase of competition.

Financial Friction Pain Points Underpin Latin America's High-Growth Potential

The fundamental reason why Latin America has become a key market for fintech and stablecoin companies is that financial friction here is not an abstract concept, but a collection of real-world problems repeatedly confirmed by macroeconomic indicators, payment scenarios, and on-chain activity. The financial needs here are not singular but exhibit a clear hierarchical structure.

In economies with relatively controlled inflation, such as Brazil and Mexico, the most direct pain point for users is often not currency devaluation, but high payment costs, slow cross-border transfers, and inefficient account services. A World Bank report shows that in Q1 2025, the average global cost of sending $200 in remittances remained as high as 6.49%, with the average cost for digital channels also around 5%. In a typical US-Mexico remittance scenario, traditional channel fees are as high as 5%-7%. For such markets, the value of fintech is first manifested in making payments, clearing, and cross-border remittances cheaper, faster, and smoother.

On the other hand, in high-inflation economies like Argentina, the issue is not just payment efficiency, but how to preserve the value of capital itself. For users in high-inflation markets, fintech and stablecoins primarily solve not an experience optimization problem, but a value storage problem. That is, how to more conveniently hold relatively stable assets and conduct cross-border US dollar settlements with lower friction.

Besides inflation divergence and cross-border remittance costs, another notable feature of Latin American financial markets is that users have been extensively educated in recent years to embrace the digital payment system, but this still-imperfect system has not fully resolved cross-border, value preservation, and "dollarization" issues.

World Bank Global Findex and related public materials show that digital payment penetration rates are already at relatively high levels in many Latin American countries. Taking Brazil as an example, World Bank documents indicate that 70% of adults made digital payments in 2024; Argentina's related proportion under the previous Findex口径 had also reached about 72%. This indicates that many core markets in Latin America no longer need user education from scratch but have entered a stage of competition centered on efficiency, cost, and scenario depth.

Taking Brazil's Pix as an example, it has evolved from a transfer tool into a de facto social-level payment infrastructure. Public data compiled by the European Payments Council stated that as of March 2024, Pix had approximately 153 million individual users and 15 million business users; in 2023, it processed about 42 billion transactions with a value of approximately 17.2 trillion reais.

However, although local digital payment networks can function, they do not satisfy all user financial needs. For users in this market, local transfers can become increasingly smooth, but once it involves cross-border settlement, US dollar storage, hedging against local currency depreciation, or low-cost global payments and collections, the friction in the original system remains significant.

It is precisely here that stablecoins begin to transform from crypto assets into practical financial tools. A highly persuasive case is the US-Mexico remittance corridor. Research from Mizuho Bank shows that through platforms like Bitso's partnership with Félix Pago, the cost of remittances using stablecoins like USDT and USDC has dropped to below 1%. Currently, Bitso handles stablecoin flows of $6.5 billion for US-Mexico transactions, capturing 10% of the $63 billion annual US-Mexico remittance market.

This on-chain data already shows that Latin American users are not experimenting sporadically with stablecoins; they are using them as practical dollarization tools that combine cross-border US dollar liquidity and value storage functions. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates that, as a percentage of GDP, "Latin America and the Caribbean" is one of the most significant for stablecoin usage globally, at approximately 7.7%.

Furthermore, the Chainalysis 2025 Latin America report shows that from July 2022 to June 2025, the cumulative crypto transaction volume in Latin America approached $1.5 trillion. Among these, Brazil is the largest regional market, receiving approximately $318.8 billion in crypto assets, Argentina about $93.9 billion, and Mexico about $71.2 billion. Regarding the proportion of stablecoin trading volume, the Chainalysis 2024 report indicates: Argentina's stablecoin trading volume share was 61.8%, Brazil's was 59.8%, both significantly higher than the global average of 44.7%.

Certainty and Growth Potential in Financial Markets

In Latin America, demand has already materialized, transactions are being formed, and data can be verified, but the digitization of payments, accounts, and fund management is still in an upward phase, with significant room for improvement in market penetration. Therefore, the market structure foundation determines that Latin America offers not just a growth story, but a rare combination of certainty and growth potential.

In terms of certainty, the aforementioned market-side data is sufficient to demonstrate that real demand exists. The growth potential stems from the medium to long-term trend of payment and account digitization.

McKinsey pointed out in its Latin American payments research that in its sample of Spanish-speaking countries, debit cards replaced cash as consumers' most preferred payment method within just two years, and mobile payments are also rapidly popularizing. Even though cash still holds a considerable share in many markets, consumer payment preferences have clearly shifted towards non-cash instruments.

From a more macro perspective, payment digitization is not just a convenience upgrade on the consumer side; it is also driving the restructuring of corporate fund processes. A report from the Inter-American Development Bank shows that the share of digital payments in offline consumption scenarios in Latin America increased from about 11% in 2020 to 30% in 2024. At the same time, over 70% of enterprises in Latin America and the Caribbean have already conducted digital procurement.

This indicates that digitization has not only penetrated personal transfers and payments but has also extended to corporate payment collections, reconciliation, fund pooling, and procurement management. For fintech companies, this brings a larger addressable market. For instance, Payoneer recently enhanced its local collection capabilities in Mexico, helping global sellers receive payments directly in Mexican pesos from local e-commerce platforms, reducing exchange costs; while Jeeves launched a stablecoin-supported corporate card for Latin American businesses, aiming to shorten cross-border settlement times from days to minutes.

The emergence of stablecoins further strengthens this combination of certainty and growth potential. For Latin America, the importance of stablecoins lies not primarily in their investment attributes, but in their role as a technological tool to address US dollar needs and cross-border settlement problems.

Remittance volumes remain persistently high, and cross-border payment costs exhibit long-term rigidity. This makes the integration of stablecoins with local payment rails more akin to filling a structural gap in the real financial system rather than providing a short-term speculative tool.

Stablecoin payment services have already begun initial implementation in Argentina. For example, Takenos, an Argentine fintech company backed by Variant Fund and Lattice Capital, announced that as of March this year, its Solana blockchain-based stablecoin solution had processed over $500 million in cross-border payments, serving 500,000 users across 20 Latin American countries, primarily for salary disbursements and corporate transactions.

Why Latin America is the New Bet for US Capital

Compared to the highly mature, giant-filled, and long-educated US market, many fintech and crypto finance sectors in Latin America are still in a phase where infrastructure is forming but the landscape is not yet finalized. For VCs, this usually represents a better entry point.

In recent years, financing in Latin America has continued to grow, with capital flowing more towards mature companies that have adapted to market changes and have more robust models. Local capital still tends to favor early stages, while foreign capital, represented by US investors, prefers to enter when companies are more mature and scalable, acting as an amplifier after the model is initially validated and expansibility becomes apparent.

Compared to Latin America, user education in the US was completed early, infrastructure is long mature, and the division of labor among leading platforms and existing financial institutions is more solidified. Latecomers can either only target very niche segments, face extremely high customer acquisition costs, or must wrestle market share from existing giants. In contrast, financial service boundaries in Latin America are being redefined; even if some segments already have leaders, overall penetration, product depth, and regional expansion are still ongoing.

Many fintech and crypto companies in the US face a more mature and crowded存量 financial system. What they are competing for is not just users, but payment entry points, account relationships, clearing paths, and regulatory definition power.

The repeated setbacks of the US crypto market structure bill in 2026 illustrate this point. The resistance comes both from ongoing disagreements within Congress over stablecoin yields, token classification, and regulatory jurisdiction, and from the banking system's wariness towards stablecoins, trust charters, and the deposit substitution effect.

But companies entering Latin America are helping the market leap from an inefficient old system to a new one. Users have stronger reasons to migrate, and the growth space comes more from new penetration and structural upgrades. These two scenarios have completely different capital pricing logics. The former is more like competing for存量, the latter more like capturing增量.

However, reward always coexists with risk. What truly attracts US financial institutions to Latin America is never low risk, but high value density. But the other side of high value density is often more complex regulation, foreign exchange, and macro environments.

For US financial institutions, the opportunity here does not lie in simply replicating domestic products, but in whether they can truly build payment, clearing, dollarized storage, and compliance capabilities into infrastructure within a high-friction market. But this path is also fraught with thorns. As Ripio CEO Sebastián Serrano said, "Financial services are highly localized." Therefore, even a crypto giant like Coinbase paused its services in Argentina due to various internal considerations.

Precisely because of this, Latin America is not an easy arbitrage game, but more like an endurance race with higher requirements for execution, risk control, license understanding, and localized operations.

In this race, we have already seen concrete现实切面: from street vendors in Rio de Janeiro displaying Pix QR codes for收款, to families in Mexico City receiving USDC remittances from Chicago via WhatsApp, to freelancers in Buenos Aires receiving salaries for remote work in USDT.

Whoever can transform these real, existing financial pain points into sustainable, replicable, and cross-regionally expandable service capabilities will be the ultimate winner.

Связанные с этим вопросы

QWhy is Latin America considered a key battleground for the next round of financial infrastructure restructuring by US payment giants, venture capital funds, and stablecoin startups?

ALatin America is seen as a key battleground due to its high financial friction, including issues like high payment costs, slow cross-border transfers, inefficient account services, and the need for dollar-denominated value storage in high-inflation economies. The region has a high digital payment adoption rate but the existing system hasn't fully solved cross-border, value preservation, and 'dollarization' problems, creating a significant opportunity for new financial infrastructure.

QWhat specific financial pain points in Latin America are creating opportunities for fintech and stablecoin companies?

AThe financial pain points are layered. In economies like Brazil and Mexico, the main issues are high costs for payments and cross-border remittances, and inefficient account services. In high-inflation economies like Argentina, the primary problem is the need for value preservation and convenient access to hold stable assets and conduct low-friction cross-border dollar settlements.

QHow do stablecoins function as a practical financial tool in Latin America, particularly in the US-Mexico remittance corridor?

AStablecoins like USDT and USDC are used as practical dollarization tools for cross-border dollar liquidity and value storage. In the US-Mexico remittance corridor, platforms using stablecoins have reduced transfer costs to under 1%, compared to 5%-7% for traditional channels. For example, Bitso processes $6.5 billion in stablecoin flows, capturing 10% of the $63 billion annual remittance market between the US and Mexico.

QWhat combination of market factors makes Latin America attractive to US capital, beyond just growth potential?

AUS capital is attracted by the combination of certainty and growth potential. Certainty comes from verified, real demand and existing transaction data. Growth potential comes from the ongoing upward trend in payment and account digitization, with significant room for increased market penetration. The region is in a phase of infrastructure formation where the competitive landscape is not yet finalized, offering a better entry point for venture capital compared to the saturated US market.

QWhat are the major risks and challenges for US financial institutions and companies operating in the Latin American market?

AThe major risks and challenges include complex regulatory environments, foreign exchange volatility, and macroeconomic instability. Success requires strong execution, risk management capabilities, a deep understanding of local licensing, and effective localized operations, rather than simply replicating products from the US market. It is a demanding endurance race, not a simple arbitrage opportunity.

Похожее

South Korean Exchanges 'Battle' Regulators, Challenging the Boundaries of Enforcement and Legislation

South Korea's cryptocurrency industry is engaged in a rare, direct confrontation with regulators. The Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), the primary anti-money laundering (AML) watchdog, has recently imposed heavy penalties on major exchanges like Upbit and Bithumb for alleged violations involving unregistered overseas VASPs and AML procedures. However, exchanges are now actively challenging these actions in court and through industry associations. In a significant shift, the Seoul Administrative Court ruled in favor of Upbit's operator, Dunamu, overturning part of an FIU-ordered business suspension. The court found the FIU's penalty criteria and justification insufficiently clear. Similarly, the court suspended the enforcement of a six-month business suspension against Bithumb pending a final ruling, citing potential irreversible harm to the exchange. Beyond legal battles, the industry is contesting proposed legislative amendments. The Digital Asset eXchange Alliance (DAXA) strongly opposes a draft rule that would mandate Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs) for all crypto transfers over 10 million KRW (~$6,800). DAXA argues this "poison pill" clause violates legal principles and would overwhelm the STR system, increasing reports from 63,000 to an estimated 5.45 million annually for major exchanges, thereby crippling effective AML monitoring. This conflict highlights a structural tension in South Korea's crypto governance: comprehensive digital asset laws are still developing, while regulators rely heavily on AML enforcement. The industry's move from passive compliance to active legal and legislative challenges signifies a new phase, pressing for clearer rules and more proportionate enforcement. While short-term disputes may intensify, this clash could ultimately lead to a more mature and sustainable regulatory framework for South Korea's vibrant crypto market.

marsbit39 мин. назад

South Korean Exchanges 'Battle' Regulators, Challenging the Boundaries of Enforcement and Legislation

marsbit39 мин. назад

After 50x Storage Surge, Justin Sun Always Looks to the Next Decade

Sun Yuchen, known for his controversial stunts like a $30 million lunch with Warren Buffett (canceled due to a kidney stone) and eating a $6.2 million duct-taped banana, is often overshadowed by a significant fact: his decade-long track record of spotting major investment trends. In 2016, he famously advised young people to invest in Bitcoin, Nvidia, Tesla, and Tencent instead of buying property. A hypothetical $20,000 investment in Nvidia and Tesla from that list would now be worth over 50 million RMB. His latest major call was on November 6, 2025, predicting a "50x storage opportunity" tied to the AI boom, which materialized with Sandisk's stock surging nearly 50-fold by 2026. Looking ahead, Sun now focuses on the next frontier: Physical AI. He identifies four key areas: 1. **Embodied AI/Robotics**: He sees this reaching its "iPhone moment," with companies like UBTech and Galaxy General leading in commercialization. 2. **Drones**: Viewed as the first commercially viable form of Physical AI, revolutionizing sectors from warfare (e.g., AeroVironment's Switchblade) to logistics. 3. **Spatial Computing**: Beyond VR, it's about AI understanding physical space, a foundational technology for robotics and autonomous systems, exemplified by Apple's Vision Pro. 4. **Space Exploration**: After a 2025 suborbital flight with Blue Origin, Sun advocates for space as the ultimate frontier, discussing blockchain's potential role in space asset management and data transactions. His investment philosophy involves betting on entire, inevitable trends rather than single companies. For robotics, he sees Tesla (the body/manufacturer) and Nvidia (the brain/AI platform) as complementary plays. In defense drones, he highlights companies making tanks obsolete (AeroVironment) and those augmenting fighter jets (Kratos). For space, he participated in Blue Origin's flight and anticipates SpaceX's potential IPO to redefine the sector's valuation. Sun Yuchen's vision frames the next two decades not as a revolution in information flow (like the internet), but in the fundamental operation of the physical world through AI-powered robots, autonomous systems, and spatial intelligence, ultimately extending human and AI activity into space. While many still focus on conventional assets, he continues to look toward the next technological horizon.

marsbit1 ч. назад

After 50x Storage Surge, Justin Sun Always Looks to the Next Decade

marsbit1 ч. назад

The Billionaires Behind the Most Expensive Midterm Election in History

"The Most Expensive Midterm Elections and Their Billionaire Backers" This analysis details the unprecedented scale of spending in the 2026 midterm elections, highlighting the key billionaire donors shaping the political landscape. Jeff Yass, founder of Susquehanna International Group, has contributed over $81 million, ranking third among individual donors behind George Soros ($102.6M) and Elon Musk ($84.8M). Yass is a major donor to Trump's MAGA Inc. and supports school choice and various candidates. Overall, federal committees have raised over $4.7 billion this cycle, with political ad spending projected to reach $10.8 billion. Republican-aligned groups are significantly out-raising their Democratic counterparts. "Dark money" from undisclosed sources continues to grow. The core stakes involve control of Congress and policy direction for Trump's final term. Donors are also motivated by specific issues: Sergey Brin and Chris Larsen are funding opposition to a proposed California wealth tax and supporting crypto-friendly policies. Other top donors include OpenAI's Greg Brockman and his wife Anna ($50M total to MAGA Inc. and an AI-focused PAC), Richard Uihlein ($45.3M to conservative causes), venture capitalists Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz (each over $44M to crypto/AI PACs and MAGA Inc.), Miriam Adelson ($42.6M to GOP leadership PACs), Paul Singer ($33.9M), and Diane Hendricks ($25.8M to MAGA Inc.). The article notes that the peak fundraising period is still ahead, with major primaries approaching.

marsbit1 ч. назад

The Billionaires Behind the Most Expensive Midterm Election in History

marsbit1 ч. назад

The Largest IPO in History Is Approaching, Surpassing SpaceX, 28 Years of AI Self-Iteration, Countdown to Intelligence Explosion

"Anthropic Nears Trillion-Dollar IPO, Fueled by Explosive Growth and 2028 'Intelligence Explosion' Warning Anthropic is considering a deal valuing the AI company near $1 trillion, potentially leading to one of the largest IPOs ever and surpassing SpaceX. Its revenue has skyrocketed, with Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) reaching $45 billion in May 2026—a 500% increase in just five months. This vertical growth curve is attributed to its key products, Claude Code and Cowork, dominating AI coding and enterprise collaboration. Beyond commercial success, co-founder Jack Clark issued a pivotal warning in an interview: there is a greater than 50% chance that by the end of 2028, AI systems will achieve recursive self-improvement—the ability to autonomously build a 'better version' of themselves, initiating an 'intelligence explosion.' This prophecy underpins the company's astronomical valuation, as the market prices in the potential for transformative and disruptive AI. Further signaling its ambition, Anthropic formed a $1.5 billion joint venture with Goldman Sachs and Blackstone, aiming to disrupt traditional consulting firms like McKinsey by deploying Claude AI for complex strategic work. This move tests AI's capacity to replace high-level cognitive labor, a precursor to its predicted autonomous evolution. The narrative presents a dual future: unprecedented economic opportunity alongside significant risks like economic restructuring and security threats. Anthropic's meteoric rise and Clark's 2028 prediction frame the coming years as a countdown to a potential technological singularity."

marsbit1 ч. назад

The Largest IPO in History Is Approaching, Surpassing SpaceX, 28 Years of AI Self-Iteration, Countdown to Intelligence Explosion

marsbit1 ч. назад

Торговля

Спот
Фьючерсы

Популярные статьи

Как купить ZEN

Добро пожаловать на HTX.com! Мы сделали приобретение Horizen (ZEN) простым и удобным. Следуйте нашему пошаговому руководству и отправляйтесь в свое крипто-путешествие.Шаг 1: Создайте аккаунт на HTXИспользуйте свой адрес электронной почты или номер телефона, чтобы зарегистрироваться и бесплатно создать аккаунт на HTX. Пройдите удобную регистрацию и откройте для себя весь функционал.Создать аккаунтШаг 2: Перейдите в Купить криптовалюту и выберите свой способ оплатыКредитная/Дебетовая Карта: Используйте свою карту Visa или Mastercard для мгновенной покупки Horizen (ZEN).Баланс: Используйте средства с баланса вашего аккаунта HTX для простой торговли.Третьи Лица: Мы добавили популярные способы оплаты, такие как Google Pay и Apple Pay, для повышения удобства.P2P: Торгуйте напрямую с другими пользователями на HTX.Внебиржевая Торговля (OTC): Мы предлагаем индивидуальные услуги и конкурентоспособные обменные курсы для трейдеров.Шаг 3: Хранение Horizen (ZEN)После приобретения вами Horizen (ZEN) храните их в своем аккаунте на HTX. В качестве альтернативы вы можете отправить их куда-либо с помощью перевода в блокчейне или использовать для торговли с другими криптовалютами.Шаг 4: Торговля Horizen (ZEN)С легкостью торгуйте Horizen (ZEN) на спотовом рынке HTX. Просто зайдите в свой аккаунт, выберите торговую пару, совершайте сделки и следите за ними в режиме реального времени. Мы предлагаем удобный интерфейс как для начинающих, так и для опытных трейдеров.

500 просмотров всегоОпубликовано 2024.04.02Обновлено 2025.08.05

Как купить ZEN

Обсуждения

Добро пожаловать в Сообщество HTX. Здесь вы сможете быть в курсе последних новостей о развитии платформы и получить доступ к профессиональной аналитической информации о рынке. Мнения пользователей о цене на ZEN (ZEN) представлены ниже.

活动图片