The global payments system moves trillions of dollars annually, yet it operates like a postal service from an era when bank clerks manually processed wire transfers in batches. A middle-market manufacturer in Germany wanting to pay a supplier in Singapore faces delays of three to five business days, opaque fees that can consume two to three percent of the transaction value, and zero visibility into where the money sits during settlement. This is not a fringe problem. It is the standard experience for enterprises conducting legitimate international commerce, and it represents a structural failure of financial infrastructure that the banking industry has tolerated for half a century.
The SWIFT network, the backbone of correspondent banking that orchestrates most cross-border payments, was architected in the 1970s for batch processing and domestic-centric connectivity. The technology that undergirds it—message formatting, routing protocols, settlement windows—reflects the technical constraints and business assumptions of that era. Banks accumulate payment instructions throughout the day and settle them in overnight batches. Correspondent banks take their cut along the way. The system prioritizes institutional certainty over speed. For decades, this was acceptable. Market participants had few alternatives, and the inefficiencies were baked into pricing.
But the constraints of legacy infrastructure have become increasingly visible as real-time payment expectations have matured. The European Central Bank rolled out TARGET Instant Payment Settlement (TIPS) in 2017. BIS research suggests that instant payment schemes are now live in 57 jurisdictions, with hundreds of millions in daily transaction volume. Domestic real-time payments have proven not merely desirable but economically viable. The contrast between what is possible within borders and what remains possible across them has become impossible to ignore. Enterprises now expect to move money across continents as quickly as they move it across cities. The existing system cannot deliver on that expectation.
Stablecoins—digital assets pegged to fiat currencies, typically the US dollar, and settling on permissionless blockchains—now offer a direct challenge to this calcified order. A stablecoin transfer between institutions occurs in minutes rather than days. Settlement is final and atomic; there is no intermediate custodial step where a correspondent bank holds and delays the funds. Transaction costs can be reduced to basis points rather than percentage points. A payment of $1 million that would incur $20,000 in fees through traditional channels might cost $50 through a stablecoin bridge. The transparency is native: both sender and receiver see the transaction in real time on an immutable ledger.
The regulatory landscape surrounding stablecoins remains contested. The European Banking Authority has moved to harmonize rules across EU member states. The Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency have signaled openness to bank-issued stablecoins while maintaining caution about non-bank issuers. But the regulatory trajectory is no longer whether stablecoins will operate in the financial system—it is how they will be integrated, supervised, and reconciled with existing payment rails. That shift in the nature of the debate itself signals a fundamental reassessment of the technology's role.
The incumbents are not passive observers. Major banks have begun experimenting with stablecoin rails for their own cross-border operations. Central bank digital currencies—government-backed digital payment tokens—are in pilot phases across multiple jurisdictions. The International Monetary Fund has begun to view programmable money and instant settlement as viable components of the future payments architecture. But the critical insight is that these adaptations are reactive. They represent attempts to retrofit legacy institutions into a new paradigm rather than building from first principles. A bank adopting stablecoins is still constrained by capital requirements, compliance overhead, and the need to remain profitable within existing business models. A blockchain-native stablecoin issuer faces neither of these constraints.
The economic pressure on the current system will only intensify. As emerging markets demand faster capital flows, as SMEs require access to global markets with lower friction costs, and as remote work and distributed supply chains become the norm rather than the exception, the gap between what the legacy system offers and what participants need will widen. The question is not whether change will occur but at what velocity and with which institutions driving it.
Stablecoin infrastructure represents one possible answer. It is not the only one. But it is no longer marginal or speculative. It is operating at scale, reducing costs in real time, and proving that the fundamental problem—settlement delay and information asymmetry—has engineering solutions that work today. The financial establishment built a system for the era of telegrams and mail trains. The world has moved on. How quickly the institutions move with it will determine whether they lead the rewiring of global payments or become artifacts of it.
Written by the editorial team — independent journalism powered by Pressnow.