Four of the most powerful names in payments, Stripe, Visa, Mastercard, and Coinbase, are forming a consortium to launch a new stablecoin platform. The companies that collectively process the majority of the world’s card transactions want a piece of the fastest-growing corner of crypto.
The stablecoin market currently exceeds $325 billion in total value. Circle and Tether together command roughly 80% of that market. This consortium is a direct challenge to that duopoly, and it’s backed by companies with distribution networks that dwarf anything in crypto today.
What we know so far
Stripe, Visa, and Mastercard are the confirmed backers of the forthcoming platform, with Coinbase reportedly considering joining the effort. The project is still in early stages, with no official name, token details, or reserve structure disclosed publicly.
Stripe acquired Bridge, a stablecoin infrastructure company, for $1.1 billion in late 2024. Mastercard acquired BVNK earlier in 2026 to strengthen its own stablecoin capabilities. Reports regarding this consortium emerged on June 3, 2026, from unnamed sources.
Coinbase’s potential involvement adds crypto-native credibility to the traditional finance players. Coinbase operates one of the largest regulated exchanges in the US and already has deep ties to the stablecoin ecosystem through its partnership with Circle on USDC. The company earns significant revenue from USDC-related activities, which makes its potential participation in a competing stablecoin venture particularly complicated.
Why traditional payments giants want in
Stablecoins can facilitate cross-border payments at a fraction of the cost of traditional correspondent banking. Visa and Mastercard operate in over 200 countries and territories. Stripe powers payments for millions of internet businesses. Coinbase serves tens of millions of retail and institutional crypto users.
Market reaction and competitive fallout
Shares of both Circle, which trades under the ticker CRCL, and Coinbase dropped following the news. The Circle decline reflects that USDC is the product most directly in the crosshairs. The Coinbase drop likely reflects uncertainty about whether Coinbase’s potential role in the consortium could complicate its existing USDC revenue streams.
The timing also matters. US stablecoin regulation has been moving toward clearer frameworks, which tends to favor large, well-capitalized issuers with compliance infrastructure.
Facebook tried something similar with Libra (later renamed Diem) back in 2019, assembling a consortium of payment companies and tech firms. That project collapsed under regulatory pressure. The difference this time: the regulatory environment is friendlier, the technology is more mature, and the companies involved have spent billions on stablecoin infrastructure before even announcing the partnership.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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