Visa 正在悄然将稳定币纳入主流支付管道,而您却毫不知情
Burns Brief
Visa 表示,其稳定币结算试点目前支持 9 个区块链,年运行率已达到 70 亿美元。市场参与者正在仔细权衡其影响,结果可能取决于更广泛的宏观条件和交易量。观察 $ETH $SOL $AVAX 的反应 - 高于或低于关键水平的决定性走势将确认下一个趋势。
Visa said its settlement pilot for stablecoins now supports nine blockchains and has reached a run rate of $7 billion a year. The company announced on April 29 that it added Arc, Base, Canton, Polygon and Tempo to a pilot that already used Avalanche, Ethereum, Solana and Stellar. Visa said the annualized settlement run rate is up 50% from the prior quarter. The pilot remains bounded by Visa's own language, but the signal is in where the volume sits. Stablecoins are entering the part of payments consumers rarely see, the settlement layer that moves value between issuers, acquirers, banks, program managers and treasury systems after a transaction has already been authorized. That makes the update a settlement-infrastructure signal as much as a blockchain support list. Visa is testing whether stablecoins can become a parallel settlement option inside payment infrastructure that already touches banks, card programs and merchants across markets. The operational point is direct: crypto adoption is moving into the back office before it becomes visible at the checkout screen. The conclusion has limits. The company described a pilot and support, gave a run rate for stablecoin settlement, and left the split by chain, stablecoin, partner, and geography undisclosed. That keeps things bounded: the network is adding optional settlement rails, while traditional settlement remains part of the stack. Related Reading Crypto now projected to move $719 trillion through global payments Consumers may not see the shift yet, but the fight over how money moves is already underway. Apr 9, 2026 · Gino Matos How Visa got to nine chains Visa has been building toward this point for several years. In 2023, the company said it had moved millions of USDC between partners over Solana and Ethereum to settle fiat-denominated VisaNet payments. That announcement followed an earlier Crypto.com issuer pilot and expanded the settlement work to merchant acquirers Worldpay and Nuvei. The operational issue is
Key Takeaways
- Visa said its settlement pilot for stablecoins now supports nine blockchains and has reached a run rate of $7 billion a year
- The company announced on April 29 that it added Arc, Base, Canton, Polygon and Tempo to a pilot that already used Avalanche, Ethereum, Solana and Stellar
- Visa said the annualized settlement run rate is up 50% from the prior quarter
- The pilot remains bounded by Visa's own language, but the signal is in where the volume sits
- That makes the update a settlement-infrastructure signal as much as a blockchain support list