$CFX
Visa and Mastercard, during earnings calls in July and August 2025, reported that stablecoin usage remains minimal and primarily relevant in emerging markets.
The negligible stablecoin impact highlights Visa and Mastercard’s continued dominance, though rapid growth in emerging markets suggests potential shifts in global payment systems.
Visa and Mastercard have recently declared that the current usage of stablecoins is negligible compared to their total payment volume. The focus remains on stablecoin growth potential in emerging markets.
CEO Ryan McInerney of Visa and CEO Michael Miebach of Mastercard have explained their integration strategies . Visa emphasizes stablecoin’s potential for digitizing cash in difficult markets. Mastercard sees them as an additive currency .
The report has an immediate effect on perceptions in financial markets regarding stablecoins’ direct competition impact. Visa acknowledges the potential for faster cross-border transactions via stablecoins.
Despite the low current impact of stablecoins, the strategic focus on regulated assets suggests an evolving approach. Both companies recognize the monetary shift in unstable fiat regions influenced by stablecoin utilization.
Stablecoin transaction volume in Q1 2025 exceeded $6 trillion, highlighting their crucial potential in specific payment corridors.
Visa’s increased blockchain integration and support for major stablecoins outline a potential future of expanded cross-border payments. Continued growth may enhance the monetary landscape in endorsing ecosystems like Ethereum and Stellar.
“Stablecoins could enable us to have faster cross-border transactions… I do think… there is real product market fit for stablecoins in remittances for certain corridors. And as the largest money movement platform around the world, we’re going to be an early adopter of a lot of those things on behalf of our clients and their end users.” – Ryan McInerney, CEO, Visa