The second half of stablecoins no longer belongs to the crypto circle
Author: Baihua Blockchain
On March 17, 2026, Mastercard announced the acquisition of BVNK for up to $1.8 billion.
This name is hardly known outside the crypto circle. But four months ago, Coinbase was willing to pay $2 billion for it, only to abandon the deal at the last moment during the due diligence phase.
What a crypto exchange giant just discarded, a traditional payment giant immediately picked up, and even at a 10% discount.
The signal from this deal is crystal clear: the battle for stablecoin infrastructure has spread from within the crypto circle to the heart of traditional finance.
What Coinbase Didn't Want, Mastercard Eagerly Bought
First, let's talk about that failed acquisition.
In October 2025, Coinbase and BVNK signed an exclusive negotiation agreement, offering about $2 billion. After entering due diligence, both parties announced in November that they would no longer proceed. The reasons were not made public, but industry speculation pointed in several directions: Coinbase, as a crypto exchange, faces far greater regulatory scrutiny for mergers and acquisitions than traditional financial institutions; meanwhile, Coinbase itself was directing more resources towards the endogenous growth of the Base chain, making the $2 billion purchase of a payment intermediary potentially not the best choice.
Mastercard almost entered the scene at the same time Coinbase retreated. The speed from entering negotiations to locking in the deal was extremely fast.
The deal structure consists of $1.5 billion in upfront cash plus $300 million in performance-based earnouts. Considering that BVNK was valued at only $750 million when it completed its Series B financing in December 2024, the $1.8 billion price tag means more than doubling in just over a year. This premium is not for technology, but for licenses and pipelines.
An interesting comparison: In October 2024, Stripe acquired the stablecoin company Bridge for $1.1 billion. A year and a half later, Mastercard offered $1.8 billion for BVNK. The value of stablecoin infrastructure continues to rise. The pricing power in this sector is shifting from crypto VCs to the CFOs of traditional finance.
What Exactly Is BVNK Selling?
For example:
A boss exporting plush toys in Guangzhou needs to collect payments from buyers in Nigeria every quarter. The traditional route involves using an intermediary bank: money starts from a Nigerian bank, passes through at least two intermediary banks, deducting several layers of fees, and arrives 2-3 days later, with the exchange rate taking a hit. If it coincides with a weekend or maintenance of the African banking system, it adds another two days.
What BVNK does is called the "stablecoin sandwich": it collects local fiat currency at the front end, automatically converts it to USDC in the backend, transmits it via blockchain, and then converts it back to local currency at the destination. The entire process can be compressed to a few minutes, with fees an order of magnitude lower than traditional wire transfers.
But this is not the most valuable part of BVNK. There are other companies that can do similar things; Fireblocks is doing it, Circle is doing it too. BVNK's real moat is that stack of licenses.
In the UK, it obtained an electronic money institution (EMI) license issued by the FCA through the acquisition of System Pay Services. In the EU, it obtained a CASP license under the MiCA framework from the Malta Financial Services Authority, allowing it to operate throughout the European Economic Area. Coupled with fiat currency exchange coverage in over 130 countries and an annual processing volume of about $30 billion, clients include Worldpay, Flywire, and dLocal—big players in the payment industry.
In short, BVNK is a stablecoin pipeline operator that has already obtained a global passport. In an increasingly regulated environment, this passport is worth more than any technology.
Mastercard's True Intent: The Missing Piece for MTN
Mastercard's acquisition of BVNK is not a spur-of-the-moment decision.
For the past two years, Mastercard has been building something called the Multi-Token Network (MTN)—a private permissioned blockchain specifically designed for settling tokenized bank deposits, regulated stablecoins, and tokenized assets. JPMorgan and Standard Chartered have already conducted tests on it.
However, MTN has a fatal flaw: it is a closed network, lacking an efficient bridge to the public blockchain world. You can think of MTN as a highway that has been completed but lacks on-ramps connecting to city streets.
BVNK is that on-ramp.
After the acquisition is completed, Mastercard suddenly has many more options. Atomic settlement—where payment and ownership transfer simultaneously—means no more waiting for the 2-3 day delays of ACH or SWIFT. 24/7 cross-border B2B settlement, regardless of whether banks are open. Plus, programmable payments: for example, a supplier payment will only be released automatically in stablecoins by a smart contract after the logistics system confirms shipment and an on-chain oracle verifies it.
Mastercard also has a system called Crypto Credential, which replaces complex wallet addresses with human-readable aliases (similar to email addresses) to ensure each transaction complies with FATF travel rules. BVNK's infrastructure directly integrates with this certification, allowing merchants to receive stablecoins without touching private keys.
It's worth noting the divergence in strategy between Mastercard and Visa. Visa is taking the "making friends" route—partnering with Solana, deeply binding with Circle, and building a tokenized asset platform called VTAP, focusing on the retail end and USDC. Mastercard, on the other hand, has chosen the "buyout" route—spending heavily to directly acquire core infrastructure and build its own multi-chain, multi-asset network, focusing on heavy B2B settlement.
Which route is better? It's hard to say. But Mastercard's route is more expensive and less reversible.
The GENIUS Act: The Real Catalyst for This Deal
Mastercard's willingness to spend $1.8 billion hinges on one condition: in July 2025, the U.S. President signed the GENIUS Act.
This is the first comprehensive federal legislation on stablecoins in U.S. history. It does several key things: clarifies that "payment stablecoins" are neither securities nor commodities, governed by banking regulators (OCC); requires issuers to maintain a 1:1 high liquidity reserve and undergo monthly audits; and ensures that even if the issuer goes bankrupt, holders have priority claims on the reserve assets.
In other words: stablecoins are finally not in a gray area. For publicly traded companies like Mastercard, this means the board can approve large acquisitions without worrying about being knocked on the door by the SEC in the middle of the night.
By acquiring BVNK, an entity licensed in multiple countries, Mastercard effectively bought a "regulated seat." Under the framework of the GENIUS Act, it can manage and issue payment stablecoins more freely, with compliance costs significantly front-loaded.
This is also why Coinbase couldn't close the deal while Mastercard could—Mastercard, as a licensed banking service provider, has far greater regulatory certainty in integrating BVNK than a crypto exchange.
Who Should Be Nervous?
The most direct impact falls on Ripple. Cross-border payments have been the story Ripple has been telling for nearly a decade, but it has always lacked a network that covers 150 million merchants globally like Mastercard does. Now that Mastercard itself has on-chain settlement capabilities, Ripple's narrative becomes awkward—your technology may have come earlier, but their pipeline is thicker.
Traditional intermediary banks are also in a tough spot. If Mastercard can route high-value B2B payments directly through on-chain tracks, those banks that rely on fees from cross-border remittances may see their commission income plummet.
However, there are differing voices in the crypto community. Stablecoins were originally products of the decentralized world, but now all the traffic runs on Mastercard's permissioned chain and licensed nodes—what's the difference from traditional finance? The Bank of England is already worried about another issue: if stablecoins become too convenient, and consumers move their bank deposits to stablecoin accounts, what will happen to the credit supply of commercial banks?
Conclusion
Ultimately, stablecoins are transitioning from "crypto products" to "financial pipelines." In the words of Mastercard's Chief Product Officer Jorn Lambert, most financial institutions and fintech companies will eventually offer digital currency services—what Mastercard aims to do is become that pipeline.
Users swipe their cards at the front end, while what runs in the backend may be USDC. They are unaware of the blockchain, only perceiving faster and cheaper transactions.
This is the true picture of stablecoin mainstreaming: not getting everyone to use crypto wallets, but enabling everyone to use stablecoins without even realizing it.
For $1.8 billion, Mastercard is not just buying a company; it is acquiring the toll booth for the next generation payment system.
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