Cross-border payments may soon move faster as banks gain access to stablecoin settlement through a new deal between Finastra and Circle. The collaboration will connect USDC, Circle’s dollar-pegged digital token, to Finastra’s Global PAYplus platform.

Finastra Opens Its Network to USDC

Finastra said the integration will allow banks using its payments hub to settle transactions in USDC even when instructions on both sides remain in fiat currency. GPP currently processes more than $5 trillion daily in cross-border payments.

The move offers institutions a way to bypass some of the delays and costs tied to correspondent banking chains while maintaining compliance and foreign exchange processes.

“This collaboration is about giving banks the tools they need to innovate in cross-border payments without having to build a standalone payment processing infrastructure,” commented Chris Walters, CEO of Finastra. “By connecting Finastra's payment hub to Circle's stablecoin infrastructure, we can help our clients access innovative settlement options.”

USDC is a fully reserved stablecoin regulated to maintain its peg to the dollar. By embedding it into GPP, Finastra aims to give banks the option to test blockchain-enabled settlement within traditional banking rails.

Read more: Binance Now Accepts Circle’s Yield-Bearing USYC Token for Institutional Collateral

The deal highlights how stablecoins are being positioned not as a replacement but as a complement to established financial systems, with potential to reshape how institutions handle large-scale international payments.

Jeremy Allaire, Co-founder, Chairman and CEO of Circle, said the tie-up builds on both firms’ strengths: “Finastra's reach and expertise in powering the payments infrastructure for leading banks worldwide make them a natural choice to further expand USDC settlement in cross-border flows. Together, we're enabling financial institutions to test and launch innovative payment models that combine blockchain technology with the scale and trust of the existing banking system.”

Seeking a Banking Charter

Circle recently filed an application with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency seeking approval to establish a national trust bank in the United States to manage its USDC stablecoin reserves. The move marked a step toward placing the company’s stablecoin operations under federal oversight.

If approved, the proposed First National Digital Currency Bank would function as a federally regulated trust institution. Its primary role would be to oversee and safeguard the USDC Reserve on behalf of Circle’s U.S. issuer, ensuring compliance with regulatory standards and reinforcing confidence in the stablecoin’s backing.

The application also signals an effort to strengthen the infrastructure behind the issuance and circulation of USDC. A successful approval is also expected to bring additional regulatory clarity while embedding the stablecoin more firmly within the U.S. financial system.