Stable Value Rails: Stablecoins are Rewriting the Default Global Infrastructure

Stablecoins are evolving from crypto assets into global payment infrastructure, enabling real-time settlement, lower transaction costs, and borderless commerce.

We’re taking a look at the trends that matter most for leaders navigating the next 12–36 months.

We organize trends into three categories based on their maturity and impact timeline:

Game Changers — Trends reshaping entire industries right now. These affect how businesses operate, how value is created, and how competitive advantage is built.

Foundational Breakthroughs — Scientific and engineering advances unlocking new possibilities. These create strategic optionality for the decade ahead.

Weak Signals — Early indicators of transformations that will dominate the late 2020s. These require positioning now, even if mainstream adoption is years away.

Today, we’re diving into stablecoins.

What are stablecoins?

Stablecoins are digital currencies whose value is pegged to traditional assets such as the U.S. dollar. Unlike cryptocurrencies that can experience significant price volatility, stablecoins are designed to maintain a stable value, making them increasingly useful for payments, treasury management, cross-border transactions, and global settlement.

Stablecoins have moved from a crypto-native experiment to core financial plumbing. In 2024, total stablecoin transfer volume reached $27.6 trillion, surpassing the combined transaction volume of Visa and Mastercard by more than 7%.

That number deserves a caveat. A meaningful share of stablecoin volume is trading and bot activity rather than commerce. But even accounting for that, the underlying trend is real: from corporate treasury teams moving millions across entities to gig platforms paying contractors overseas, stablecoins have become the rails businesses reach for when speed and cost matter.

Why are businesses adopting stablecoins?

The shift is being driven by three converging forces.

Settlement speed: stablecoin transactions clear in seconds, while cross-border wires can take days and pass through multiple correspondent banks along the way.

Liquidity management: businesses operating across currencies and time zones want to hold and move value without waiting for banking hours or absorbing FX spreads at every hop.

Competitive pressure is closing the loop. Once one player in a supply chain or marketplace adopts faster settlement, everyone connected to them feels the gap.

Major financial institutions are reading these signals the same way. Stablecoins offer:

  • 24/7 settlement
  • Lower-cost cross-border payments
  • Reduced dependence on correspondent banking networks
  • Greater treasury flexibility
  • Programmable payment infrastructure

That combination is difficult to replicate with legacy rails built for a banking-hours world.

Recent momentum

A few data points show how quickly this is moving from theory to infrastructure:

Circle’s IPO signals institutional confidence
Circle’s IPO in June 2025 saw shares triple on opening day, valuing the USDC issuer at more than $18 billion. That kind of public market reception signals institutional investors are pricing in stablecoins as durable infrastructure, not a speculative side bet.

Payment platforms are embedding stablecoin rails
Mainstream payment players are building stablecoin rails directly into commerce. PayPal’s PYUSD brings a dollar-pegged stablecoin into one of the most widely used consumer wallets, and Stripe has introduced stablecoin payments for subscriptions, putting recurring revenue businesses on settlement rails that don’t sleep on weekends.

Embedded finance is making stablecoins invisible
The embedded finance layer is catching up fast. Highnote is enabling businesses to fold stablecoin payments directly into their own apps, which means the rails are becoming invisible. Companies won’t need to build crypto expertise in-house; they’ll inherit it through the platforms they already use.

Regulation is catching up
Just as important, regulatory frameworks around digital assets continue to mature globally. As compliance standards become clearer, enterprises gain greater confidence that stablecoin-based payment infrastructure can operate within existing financial, reporting, and risk-management requirements.

Why it matters

Most consumers will never know whether a payment settled through ACH, SWIFT, a card network, or a stablecoin rail. What matters is that the experience becomes faster, cheaper, and more reliable.

The pattern here echoes other infrastructure shifts: the technology becomes boring exactly when it becomes important.

As stablecoin infrastructure becomes embedded into payment platforms, marketplaces, ERP systems, and treasury workflows, the technology itself fades into the background.

The dollars look the same.

The receipts look the same.

What changes is what happens underneath, where settlement that once took days now takes seconds and where payment rails are increasingly programmable.

Looking forward: digital dollars become default settlement infrastructure

By late 2026, expect a growing share of global commerce to settle on-chain, often without consumers or even many businesses noticing the difference.

Looking further ahead, stablecoins are likely to become a foundational layer of global payments infrastructure, sitting alongside traditional banking systems rather than replacing them outright.

Just as most businesses today don’t think about the internet protocols that power their applications, many won’t think about the blockchain infrastructure powering their payments. They will simply expect money to move instantly, globally, and continuously.

For leaders watching this space, the question isn’t whether to have an opinion on crypto.

It’s whether your payment, treasury, and partner integration strategies assume settlement still takes days, when a growing share of the world is moving to one that doesn’t.

Futurism & Technology Trends