A who’s who of today’s finance industry—big banks, payment processors, crypto companies, and Silicon Valley tech firms—
announced on Tuesday that they were working together on “a new stablecoin for global money movement” called Open USD.
For the uninitiated, a stablecoin is a kind of cryptocurrency pegged to another asset—in this case (and many others), the U.S. dollar. It’s meant to be stable like traditional fiat currency but still borderless, cheap, and fast like crypto.
Open USD, the consortium says, is aimed at solving three persistent issues: ease “prohibitively expensive” fees to mint and redeem stablecoins at scale (OUSD is free); allow companies to benefit from the revenues earned on the underlying reserves (they’ll receive it all, less a management fee); and give developers some influence in the direction of the asset (OUSD will be governed by a board of the stablecoin’s partners).
And just who might those institutions be, you ask? Open Standard, the asset’s governing organization, counts
more than 100 partners. Among them: Adyen, Affirm, American Express, BBVA, BlackRock, BNY, Bridge, Cloudflare, Coinbase, Discover, DoorDash, Google, Grab, IBM, Infosys, NYSE owner ICE, Klarna, Mastercard, MoneyGram, Rakuten, Ramp, Ripple, Samsung, Shopify, SoFi, Standard Chartered, Stripe, U.S. Bank, Visa, and Western Union. (Phew.)
So who’s missing? You
surely won’t find stablecoin-providers Circle or Tether, whose USDC and USDT compete with OUSD. Ditto PayPal and Venmo, whose PYUSD serves as another alternative. And big banks like JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citi, and Wells Fargo
have said that they’re working on their own tokenized deposit network that keeps them at the center of it all. As always: Follow the money.
—AN