dimcos
85 posts


$U becomes the first stablecoin on BNB Chain to feature native EIP-3009 support for agent payments! More details 👇 x.com/UTechStables/s…




🚨𝗝𝗨𝗦𝗧 𝗜𝗡: @Visa is expanding its partnership with Bridge to bring stablecoin-linked cards to 100+ countries by the end of this year. This is bigger than it sounds. Bridge enables fintechs and developers to issue stablecoin-backed Visa cards, allowing consumers to spend directly from their stablecoin balances at Visa’s 175M+ merchant locations worldwide. The program is already live in 18 countries, with rapid expansion planned across Europe, APAC, Africa and the Middle East. But the real story sits behind the scenes. Through Bridge’s partnership with Lead Bank, issuers participating in Visa’s stablecoin settlement pilot can now settle transactions with Visa onchain. That means reconciliation and fund movement can happen via supported blockchain networks instead of relying solely on traditional correspondent settlement flows. Visa says the pilot is focused on three things: 👉 Expanding settlement optionality for issuers 👉 Improving operational efficiency via on-chain reconciliation 👉 Testing how infrastructure players like Bridge simplify blockchain interactions for institutions In simple terms: this isn’t about “crypto cards.” It’s about integrating stablecoins into the plumbing of global card settlement. If Visa, the largest card network in the world, normalizes stablecoin settlement across its ecosystem, the implications go far beyond Web3 wallets. It could reshape how issuers, FinTechs and program managers think about treasury, liquidity and cross-border value movement. We’re watching the gradual merging of card rails and blockchain rails in real time. The question is no longer if stablecoins plug into global payments infrastructure. It’s how fast it scales from pilot to default.



@ribbita2012 @JamzyOnChain Bring it on










