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Hesab selected Movement as its exclusive stablecoin settlement layer for cross-border flows. $160M in monthly volume. 1 million+ transactions per month. The corridors they serve run on informal cash networks with 2-5 day settlement and capital sitting idle in pre-funded float. Movement provides access to licensed rails across the...

31,659 views • 8 days ago •via X (Twitter)

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Stablecoin on-ramps are broken in four fundamental ways. New report by Bluechip The Geography Tax > US/EU on-ramping: 0-0.3% > Central Africa: 15-20% Same dollar. Same stablecoin. 50x price difference. Why: Licensing is fragmented across jurisdictions. Local liquidity is thin. Banks treat these markets as afterthoughts. Operators must maintain exotic currency inventory in uncertain regulatory environments. No direct issuer relationships exist, so users rely on informal networks and local telco agents who set their own spreads. The Broken Funnel: Global card on-ramp completion: 21% Africa: 6% Asia: 7% Why: Failed KYC from document verification issues. Card declines from banks blocking crypto purchases. Session timeouts from complex multi-step flows. Poor localization. Lack of local payment method support. The journey was designed for crypto-native users, not first-time buyers. Cards Are Structurally Incompatible Emerging market card on-ramping: 7-10% US/EU: 3-5% Bank transfers: 0-0.3% Why: Card networks charge 1-3% MDR on every transaction. In e-commerce, merchants hide this in product margins. Stablecoins are pegged 1:1. There's no margin. You can't inflate the price of a dollar. Ramps must also price in chargeback risk and fraud losses. The cost has nowhere to go except to the user. This gap will not close. Remittance Corridors Are Broken Tanzania to Kenya traditional: 59.7% Stablecoin: 5-6% South Africa to China traditional: 22.8% Stablecoin: 1.2% Why: Correspondent banking adds layers of intermediaries. Each one takes a cut. Limited competition in smaller corridors. Weak FX liquidity. Cash-heavy payout networks. Settlement takes 1-5 days because every leg requires reconciliation. Stablecoins bypass all of this. Settlement in under an hour. But without accessible on-ramps, the technology sits behind a wall most users can't climb.

James | Snapcrackle

12,145 views • 7 months ago

BREAKING 🚨 The IMF just published its April 2026 Global Financial Stability Report 👇 Chapter 2 is about cross-border capital flows. And it reads like a case study for why $XRP exists. Let me be clear. The report does not mention XRP. Does not mention Ripple. Does not mention RLUSD. Not once. But connect the dots yourself. Cross-border portfolio flows to emerging markets have hit nearly $4 trillion. Nonbank intermediaries now handle 75% of portfolio debt flows. The old correspondent banking system is cracking. Wider spreads. Slower settlement. Tighter conditions during stress. The IMF is describing a world that needs faster, cheaper cross-border infrastructure. Neutral bridge assets that work across currencies, markets, and regulations. Who spent a decade building exactly that? Ripple. $100B+ processed across 60+ markets. RLUSD at $1.56B market cap. $5.05B in monthly transfer volume. 515,000 transactions in 30 days. 1,278% growth since launch. Stablecoin flows into emerging markets accelerating. Brazil. LATAM. APAC. Africa. The IMF didn't name Ripple. They described the problem. Ripple already built the solution. Yes, price is in a downtrend. I see the red. But look at what's developing behind the scenes. CLARITY Act approaching markup. FDIC formalizing stablecoin rules. Treasury Secretary pushing Congress. Ripple inside the DTCC. RLUSD scaling faster than anyone projected. Price doesn't always reflect reality in real time. But it always catches up. $XRP and Ripple are here to stay. I hope you are too.

X Finance Bull

35,990 views • 3 months ago

🚨 BREAKING: Gusto just added stablecoin payouts for international contractors via ZeroHash - 400,000+ SMBs. - Tens of billions in annual payroll. - Now gets Settlement in minutes, not days. Stablecoins as an instant payouts feature for international contracts is becoming table stakes. And that's a big market. --- This is labor market math, not crypto hype. Full-time independent contractors doubled in 4 years. 13.6M in 2020 → 27.7M in 2024. 11% of US small businesses now employ international contractors. Traditional cross-border payroll takes 3-7 days. That's a week of "payment in transit" while your contractor in Argentina waits to pay rent. --- Zerohash powers this integration. Same infrastructure behind Stripe's stablecoin flows, BlackRock's tokenized fund rails, and Morgan Stanley's upcoming E-Trade crypto trading. Mastercard is reportedly circling them at $1.5-2B. --- Tempo's docs nail why this matters for payroll: "Businesses must either rely on slow, expensive, unpredictable cross-border transfers to pay employees directly, or first move liquidity to local subsidiaries to access domestic payment rails. Each domestic rail comes with its own rules, banking holidays, cutoff times, formats, and fees." That's the patchwork stablecoins replace. One ledger. Sub-cent fees. Seconds to settle. --- Gusto serves mainstream small business America. When your accountant's payroll software starts settling on blockchain rails, the infrastructure debate is over. Stablecoins aren't replacing payroll. They're replacing the 3-7 day settlement window that banks built for a workforce that no longer exists. --- #Fintech #Stablecoins #Payments #FutureOfWork #GigEconomy

Simon Taylor

28,734 views • 5 months ago