The second piece of the company’s strategy is the Digital Asset Network (DAN), which lets crypto wallet companies offer Western Union as a cash-out option. Through that network, wallet users will be able to convert digital assets into local currency through Western Union’s retail footprint, McGranahan said.

The company said its partner pipeline represents tens of millions of crypto wallets globally.

Western Union also plans to launch a Stable Card, expected later this year. It will let customers hold funds in stablecoins and spend through card networks. McGranahan said the card could be useful in inflation-sensitive markets where customers want access to U.S. dollar-denominated value with everyday spending utility.

“We expect to begin rolling this out across dozens of markets with an initial wave targeted for later this year,” he said.

Western Union’s stablecoin push comes as its core remittance business faces pressure, with rival fintechs and crypto payments firms increasingly using blockchain tech for cross-border payments. MoneyGram, for example, is looking to Circle’s USDC stablecoin, while Stripe launched its own stablecoin infrastructure with a payments-focused chain Tempo.

Read more: DoorDash is bringing stablecoin payments to masses with Stripe-backed blockchain

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(Photo by CoinWire Japan on Unsplash/Modified by CoinDesk)

Juniper Research found that 85% of all stablecoin transaction value in 2035 will be driven by international business-to-business (B2B) payments.

What to know:

  • International stablecoin payments among businesses are projected to reach $5 trillion by 2035, up from an estimated $13.4 billion this year, according to Juniper Research.
  • Juniper expects 85 percent of stablecoin transaction value in 2035 to come from cross-border B2B uses, as the tokens shift from speculative assets to core…

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