Mastercard, PayPal mull stablecoins for B2B payments
A PayPal sign displayed in front of the company's headquarters building on February 02, 2023 in San Jose, California. · Payments Dive · Justin Sullivan via Getty Images

In This Article:

This story was originally published on Payments Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Payments Dive newsletter.

Mastercard, PayPal and Payoneer are among the payments players eyeing the potential for stablecoins to advance business-to-business payments.

While consumers around the world led the way in adopting digital payments on their phones and other mobile devices, businesses may lead the way in the use of stablecoins. The value of cryptocurrencies like bitcoin have been volatile, but stablecoins are less so because they’re typically tied to money issued by a government.

Digital payments pioneer PayPal is developing and testing ways to use its own stablecoin, PYUSD, which was established in 2023, and was investigating the market for several years before that launch. Now, it’s finding B2B use cases an attractive way to advance the cryptocurrency and seek to move U.S. payments beyond their legacy rails. Principally, companies see stablecoins as a possible route to lowering costs, especially in cross-border payment situations.

Most of the payments innovation in recent years has been on the front end of the transactions, improving user interfaces, with a few on the backend, such as those related to fraud prevention, but stablecoins offer the possibility of significantly improving the backend of payments, said Jose Fernandez da Ponte, PayPal’s senior vice president of blockchain, crypto, and digital currencies.

“Most of the money still moves around on the old pipes from 50 years ago,” Fernandez da Ponte explained in a January interview. After PayPal began exploring blockchain and protocols for the purposes of using that technology to advance payments, the company quickly realized the prospects, even though it was in a lab setting, he said.

“We were running thousands of transactions per second at a cost that was fractions of a cent, and we knew that it was, again, a lab setting, and in real life it was not going to be that, but it had enough potential to say, ‘Look, even if it is ten times worse than what we are seeing, this could be very, very relevant for a payments company,’” he said.

San Jose, California-based PayPal created Fernandez da Ponte’s team partly because the company determined that “there is a chance that this transforms technology for payments and it’s just too important for us not not to have a horse in that race,” he said. A PayPal spokesperson declined to say when the team was created.

Now, PayPal has used its stablecoin in real-world B2B instances, using it to make two of its own payments last September, one to consulting firm Ernst & Young and another to tech behemoth Google for cloud services. The company also allowed two Xoom remittance partners, one in the Philippines and another in Africa, to settle international transfers last year by way of its stablecoin.