Stablecoins Are Replacing SWIFT and ACH at Scale and the Nium Deal Proves It
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The Coinbase and Nium partnership is the latest and most commercially significant sign that stablecoins are moving from a crypto-native curiosity into the core plumbing of global payments infrastructure. Stablecoin transfer volume had already eclipsed that of the ACH network by early 2026, and B2B stablecoin volumes have climbed from under $100 million monthly in early 2023 to roughly $3 billion by mid-2025. USDC's circulating supply now sits near $70 billion, ranking it the second-largest stablecoin by market value and giving it the depth required to serve as settlement infrastructure at institutional scale rather than just a trading pair on crypto exchanges.
The strategic picture for Coinbase is becoming clearer with each new deal. The earlier integration with Stripe brought USDC into consumer checkout flows. The Nium partnership extends that reach into institutional cross-border payments across 190 countries, covering the B2B and enterprise segment that moves the largest volumes. Circle's own Circle Payments Network, launched earlier in April, is building parallel infrastructure that lets institutions move USDC cross-border without handling digital assets directly. Together these moves represent a coordinated push to make USDC the default settlement layer for international payments in the same way that SWIFT became the default messaging layer for correspondent banking decades ago. The next test is whether Nium's institutional clients convert meaningful cross-border flow away from wire transfers and SWIFT onto the stablecoin rail, and whether the volumes that follow are sticky rather than experimental.