94
In a press release dated Oct. 24, U.S. payment network Zelle announced a new initiative by its operator, Early Warning Services, to leverage stablecoin technology for cross-border money movement. The move, backed by the network’s owner banks, marks a strategic pivot for the primarily domestic platform, aiming to solve the persistent challenges of cost and speed in international transfers. CEO Cameron Fowler cited improved U.S. regulatory clarity as a key enabler, allowing the company to focus on innovating for the global stage.
Our goal is to bring the trust, speed and convenience of Zelle to consumers’ international money movement needs. We’re investing where consumer need, bank capability and global opportunity intersect. With improved regulatory clarity in the U.S., we can focus on what we do best: driving innovation to market,” Fowler said.
The scale of Zelle’s ambition is matched only by the network it already commands. Early Warning Services disclosed that approximately $1 trillion was transferred over its platform last year, a figure that underscores the immense, ready-made user base it could instantly deploy into the global market. The move arrives as stablecoins solidify their role as a formidable force in global finance. According to Andreessen Horowitz, stablecoins processed $46 trillion in onchain transactions over the past year, dwarfing throughput of legacy giants like Visa.
Notably, the report notes that this surge has largely decoupled from crypto trading, signaling that these digital dollars are now being used for substantive economic purposes, powering a new, global settlement layer. Zelle is far from alone in recognizing this potential. The landscape is rapidly shifting as legacy fintechs pivot to co-opt the technology. PayPal, a long-time Zelle competitor in the U.S., has already made significant inroads with its PYUSD stablecoin, exploring its use for cross-border settlements.
Meanwhile, London-based Wise, which processed £145 billion in cross-border payments last year, is also making its first major moves into the space. The firm recently posted a job listing for a product leader to build “wallets and/or payments solutions based on stablecoins,” a signal that it views the technology as both a critical opportunity and an existential threat to its own low-cost transfer model.
You Might Be Interested In
- Ernst & Young Taps Zero Knowledge-Proofs on Ethereum to Automate Contracts
- Ondo Finance Brings 200+ Tokenized U.S. Stocks and ETFs to Solana
- MetaMask Continues Expansion Beyond Ethereum with Latest TRON Integration
- Circle Applies to Establish First National Digital Currency Bank
- Franklin Templeton Tokenizes $380 Million US Government Money Fund on Polygon & Stellar
- Franklin Templeton Backed Firm Ethena Labs to Launch Stablecoin with BUIDL as Reserves































































































































