QED seeds $9.9M in Cedar Money, a stablecoin payment platform

The newest generation of startups aiming to solve cross-border payments are focusing on stablecoins -- cryptocurrency coins often pegged to actual currencies or other commodities to help them keep stable prices -- to build solutions that work faster and often cheaper than classic financial rails. This trend is also driving a surge in investor interest in fintech.

The latest development is Cedar Money, a U.S.-based startup that recently closed $9.9 million in seed funding led by global fintech investor QED Investors with participation from Lattice, NIV, Stellar, and Wischoff Ventures.

Like many cross-border payment platforms using stablecoins, Cedar Money acts as a bridge. Businesses and individuals transact using a fiat-based site, while stablecoin transactions run in the background. Cedar Money plans to scale its payment infrastructure and tackle the inefficiencies in international payments with this funding, it said.

These inefficiencies are particularly painful in Africa, where businesses face higher transaction fees and hidden costs in currency conversions because of added risk and the costs of working with local banking. Banks profit from exchange rate spreads, adding another layer of expense. “If you look at the SWIFT network, fees globally are around 2-3%, but in Africa, they’re much higher. It’s even more gouging in places where people have less money,” founder and CEO Benjy Feinberg told TechCrunch.

Feinberg founded Cedar Money in 2022 after nearly a decade leading alternative financing provider Behalf. Before launching his latest venture, he spent time identifying the next “big” opportunity in fintech, ultimately focusing on payments and blockchain.

While stablecoins have struggled to gain traction in the U.S. due to limited use cases and competition with traditional systems like the dollar and SWIFT, Feinberg recognized a different reality in emerging markets.

Businesses across Africa, the Middle East, and South America need dollars to pay for imports, even when buying from countries like China. In countries like Nigeria or Argentina, getting dollars can be a struggle due to weak local currencies like the naira or the Argentine peso.

Cedar Money launched in early 2024, starting operations in Nigeria, helping businesses in the country accept and send money to others globally. “You want to go to a place where you can solve a big problem, and the adoption will be easier. That’s why we started in Africa — because the need is greatest here,” the chief executive said.

However, despite their popularity, stablecoin platforms face limitations that may affect their scale across markets.