Ingenico’s WalletConnect tie-up brings stablecoin payments to in-store checkout
13 January 2026
2 mins read

Ingenico’s WalletConnect tie-up brings stablecoin payments to in-store checkout

New York, Jan 13, 2026, 14:41 (EST)

  • Ingenico announced plans to support stablecoin payments at physical checkout counters through WalletConnect Pay
  • The rollout focuses on Ingenico’s Android-based point-of-sale terminals and wallets that support WalletConnect
  • WalletConnect’s CEO claimed fees will likely stay under those charged by traditional card “rails”

Payments terminal provider Ingenico announced Tuesday a partnership with WalletConnect Pay, enabling shoppers to use stablecoins at checkout and bringing crypto-style payments to everyday retail. 1

Stablecoins are digital tokens meant to maintain a stable value, typically pegged to a currency like the U.S. dollar. Until now, they’ve mostly stayed within crypto markets. Still, payments companies are pushing them as tools to speed up transfers and reduce costs, particularly for cross-border payments.

The deal comes as payments and crypto players zero in on stablecoins as a payments “rail” — a back-end channel rather than just a trading asset. Polygon Labs, a blockchain company, revealed acquisitions Tuesday aimed at boosting stablecoin payments infrastructure. Visa and Mastercard have been ramping up efforts in this space too. 2

Ingenico announced its Digital Currency app will operate on millions of its Android terminals, enabling merchants to accept five stablecoins, such as USDC, EURC, and USDT. The company added that the feature supports over 700 compatible wallets linked via WalletConnect.

“Stablecoins have emerged as a key tool for transferring value swiftly,” WalletConnect CEO Jess Houlgrave said in a statement.

Ingenico CEO Floris de Kort said the partnership allows merchants to “accept digital currencies as easily as traditional cards,” highlighting the setup’s hardware-light design and compliance.

The companies are pitching the product as a fresh take on crypto-linked cards, which typically rely on card networks. In this setup, customers pay directly from their mobile wallets. The funds then head straight to the merchant’s payment provider, with merchants able to accept stablecoins or convert the payments into fiat currency.

Ingenico’s terminals are in use across 120 countries, with the company estimating that around 40 million of its devices could support the new feature. However, it didn’t specify how many merchants would activate it right away. “Essentially any Ingenico merchant who wants to accept crypto can,” an Ingenico spokesperson told Cointelegraph, noting that it depends on merchants and their payment providers to enable the option. 3

Houlgrave told Cointelegraph that “fees are much lower across the board” compared to traditional card payments, with costs varying depending on whether merchants convert to fiat. She added that WalletConnect Pay will enable stablecoin payments on Ethereum mainnet, Base, Arbitrum, and Polygon at launch, while Optimism and Solana are slated to come next. 3

Adoption remains the key risk. Stablecoins are built to be stable, but merchants need to enable the feature, payment platforms have to back settlement, and regulators haven’t ironed out all the consumer protection and compliance issues. Even the back-end stuff counts — refunds, chargebacks, and the routine details that keep retailers grounded.

Ingenico announced the integration will roll out to acquirers and payment service providers starting January, focusing on sectors like retail, hospitality, transport, and vending. 1

Stock Market Today

Seagate (STX) stock jumps nearly 6% as Citi hikes target — what to watch next week

Seagate (STX) stock jumps nearly 6% as Citi hikes target — what to watch next week

7 February 2026
Seagate shares rose 5.9% to $429.32 Friday after Citigroup raised its price target to $480 and reiterated a buy rating. The gain ended a two-day slide but left the stock 6.6% below its Feb. 3 high. CEO Dave Mosley sold 20,000 shares on Feb. 2 under a pre-arranged plan, SEC filings show. U.S. jobs and inflation data next week are seen as key tests for tech stocks.
Cummins (CMI) stock price rebounds after earnings whipsaw as investors eye data-center power demand

Cummins (CMI) stock price rebounds after earnings whipsaw as investors eye data-center power demand

7 February 2026
Cummins shares jumped 6.8% to $577.73 Friday, recovering from a nearly 9% post-earnings drop the day before. The company reported Q4 revenue up 1% to $8.54 billion, took a $218 million charge tied to its hydrogen business, and guided for 2026 EBITDA of 17–18% of sales. Demand for data center generators offset weakness in North American truck markets. Analyst reaction was mixed; Truist raised its price target.
Corning stock hits first record close since 2000 as jobs, CPI data loom

Corning stock hits first record close since 2000 as jobs, CPI data loom

7 February 2026
Corning shares surged 8.3% to $122.16 Friday, their highest close since the dot-com era, after Meta agreed to buy up to $6 billion in fiber-optic cables. The stock is up 40% since late 2025, fueled by strong first-quarter guidance and AI data-center demand. Insiders sold shares following the rally, SEC filings show. Investors await next week’s U.S. jobs and inflation data for rate signals.
Ligand Pharmaceuticals stock slides as FDA pushes back Travere’s Filspari decision to April 13
Previous Story

Ligand Pharmaceuticals stock slides as FDA pushes back Travere’s Filspari decision to April 13

Bharat Coking Coal IPO pulls in ₹1.1 lakh crore bids as grey-market signals lift debut hopes
Next Story

Bharat Coking Coal IPO pulls in ₹1.1 lakh crore bids as grey-market signals lift debut hopes

Go toTop