NEW YORK, March 18, 2026, 04:39 EDT
Mastercard has struck a deal to acquire BVNK for as much as $1.8 billion, intensifying the race among heavyweight financial firms looking to embed blockchain into everyday payments and trade finance. Unveiled Tuesday, the agreement hands the card giant a stronger position in stablecoin infrastructure—digital tokens tied to currencies like the dollar—across remittances, business transactions, and payouts. Reuters
The timing matters because a string of recent experiments is starting to converge. Just last week, Aon reported what it says is the first stablecoin insurance-premium payment handled by a major broker—settling with USDC on Ethereum and PayPal USD over Solana. Earlier, in a February report, Citi detailed its own internal proof of concept with PwC and Solana, converting a bill of exchange into a token and running it through a full simulated issuance-to-settlement workflow. Aon plc Global Media Relations
Tokenization—transforming a financial claim like a trade document or a security into a digital token for blockchain transfer—carries the promise of speedier settlements and better traceability. In trade finance, the draw is obvious. The Asian Development Bank pegged the global funding gap at $2.5 trillion for 2025, a figure that highlights how exporters and suppliers still struggle to access working capital. Reuters
Mastercard plans to use BVNK to bridge fiat and stablecoins within its network, aiming to support growing digital currency payments. Chief Product Officer Jorn Lambert described the move as “adding on-chain rails to our network,” which he says should boost both speed and programmability. Analysts at William Blair and Citi, according to Reuters, called the deal a shortcut for Mastercard to gain licensed stablecoin infrastructure, sidestepping the need to build it from scratch. Mastercard
It’s not just Mastercard getting aggressive here. Visa is making its own stablecoin moves. Nasdaq earlier this month said it’s teaming up with Kraken to build tokenization infrastructure for blockchain-based stocks, while ICE—parent of the NYSE—is chasing approval to run a platform offering all-hours trading and on-chain settlement for tokenized securities. Duke finance professor Campbell Harvey sees tokenized stocks as “probably the lowest hanging fruit.” Reuters
Solana keeps popping up in recent corporate crypto pilots. It’s now part of Mastercard’s Crypto Partner Program—over 100 firms joined when it rolled out last week, and Solana made the list. Aon, meanwhile, ran its proof-of-concept using PYUSD on Solana, pairing it with USDC on Ethereum. “Speed and innovation do not come at the expense of control,” said Tim Fletcher, who leads Aon’s financial services group, emphasizing client concerns. Mastercard
Citi has pushed its trade-finance test deeper into the paperwork-dense center of international trade. The bank says it turned a bill of exchange—a document obligating buyers to pay at a future date—into a token. That token then let a supplier offload the payment claim to a bank at a discount. Citi claims the proof of concept used smart contracts to automate everything: from issuing and financing to repayment. Citi
The bank said its workflow can operate around the clock and wrap up in minutes, taking the place of couriered paperwork, wet-ink signatures, and batch runs. Citi also noted that this setup could eventually cover invoices and receivables—the main pockets of trade-finance demand. Citi
Still, the risks stand out. Citi pointed out its test was done with synthetic data—not actual clients—on a private or permissioned blockchain, so only select users could get in. The bank cautioned that rolling out a real product would mean dealing with rivals and different platforms, not just operating inside a walled system. Regulators haven’t settled on the rules yet. The Bank of England said last week it might tweak its proposed stablecoin framework, and economists at the ECB flagged that if stablecoins catch on, deposits could flow out of banks, making monetary policy harder to manage. Citi
All told, these moves point more to payments, treasury, and trade functions than to a retail crypto pivot. Mastercard is scooping up infrastructure, Aon is piloting settlements, and Citi is exploring how legacy trade paperwork might transition to newer systems—different plays, but targeting the same choke points. Reuters