Mastercard Drops Rival Crypto Firm As It Pushes Ahead With $1.8 Billion Stablecoin Deal

URL has been copied successfully!

Mastercard has walked away from a planned investment in crypto firm Zerohash as the company moves aggressively ahead with its $1.8 billion acquisition of stablecoin infrastructure company BVNK, marking one of the biggest moves yet by a traditional payments giant into blockchain-based finance.

The decision positions Mastercard as the first major global card network to use a multibillion-dollar acquisition to establish a direct foothold in the rapidly growing stablecoin market.

The deal, originally announced by Mastercard Chief Product Officer Jorn Lambert on March 17, 2026, is expected to close by the end of the year pending regulatory approvals.

The broader significance is clear: major financial companies are no longer experimenting cautiously with stablecoins. They are now spending billions to own the infrastructure behind them.

Stablecoins are digital currencies tied directly to traditional currencies like the U.S. dollar. Unlike volatile cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, stablecoins are designed to maintain a fixed value, making them more practical for payments, international transfers, and commercial transactions.

That is exactly why companies like Mastercard, Visa, PayPal, and Stripe are racing into the sector.

BVNK, founded in London in 2021 by CEO Jesse Hemson-Struthers, builds payment technology allowing businesses to send, receive, and manage stablecoin transactions globally.

The company currently processes roughly $30 billion in annual payment volume and works with firms including Worldpay, Deel, Rapyd, and Flywire.

Under the terms of the agreement, Mastercard will pay approximately $1.5 billion in cash upfront, with another $300 million tied to future performance targets.

The acquisition surpasses Stripe’s $1.1 billion purchase of Bridge in 2024 and becomes the largest stablecoin infrastructure acquisition completed so far.

According to reporting first published by CoinDesk, Mastercard also decided to abandon ongoing investment discussions with rival crypto infrastructure provider Zerohash, choosing instead to consolidate around a single stablecoin strategy centered on BVNK.

The company plans to integrate BVNK’s technology directly into Mastercard Move, its existing cross-border payment platform.

That would eventually allow businesses operating on Mastercard’s network to move stablecoin payments globally using Mastercard infrastructure.

For consumers and businesses, the appeal is speed and cost.

Traditional international bank transfers can take multiple days and often involve significant fees. Stablecoin transactions can settle within minutes while costing only a fraction as much.

The competitive pressure across the financial sector is intensifying quickly.

Visa invested in BVNK before Mastercard moved to acquire the company outright. PayPal launched its own stablecoin product known as PYUSD. Stripe bought Bridge. Large banks including JPMorgan Chase continue expanding blockchain-based payment systems internally.

The industry increasingly sees stablecoins not as speculative crypto products but as a possible future layer of the global payments system.

Regulation has also shifted dramatically.

The Trump administration has taken a more crypto-friendly approach than previous administrations, while Congress earlier this year passed stablecoin legislation establishing clearer legal frameworks for digital-dollar infrastructure providers.

That regulatory clarity is encouraging large financial firms to move faster.

For Mastercard, buying BVNK rather than building internally also saves time.

Executives said recreating BVNK’s licensing network and payment infrastructure independently would likely take years. The acquisition immediately gives Mastercard access to a global stablecoin payment framework already operating across more than 130 countries.

The transaction still faces regulatory review across multiple jurisdictions, including Europe, where BVNK recently secured approval under the European Union’s new Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulatory framework.

Existing BVNK customers are expected to continue operating normally throughout the approval process.

The acquisition reflects a much larger transformation underway across global finance.

Only a few years ago, many traditional payment companies treated cryptocurrency cautiously and often distanced themselves publicly from blockchain-based finance.

Now the world’s largest payment firms are spending billions to secure ownership positions inside the stablecoin ecosystem before adoption expands further.

The race is no longer about whether stablecoins will matter.

It is about who controls the infrastructure when they do.

JBizNews Desk — New York

© JBizNews.com All Rights Reserved. Reproduction or distribution without written permission is prohibited.

Please follow us:
Follow by Email
X (Twitter)
Whatsapp
LinkedIn
Copy link