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Policy

Hyundai Finishes USDT Treasury Settlement Pilot for US–Mexico Trade

Hyundai Motor’s US and Mexican units have completed a pilot cross-border treasury transfer using Tether’s USDT stablecoin, settling a $20,000 payment in roughly seven minutes on the Avalanche

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
July 13, 2026
5 min read
NEWS
Hyundai Finishes USDT Treasury Settlement Pilot for US–Mexico Trade
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

Hyundai Motor’s US and Mexican units have completed a pilot cross-border treasury transfer using Tether’s USDT stablecoin, settling a $20,000 payment in roughly seven minutes on the Avalanche blockchain. The trial is intended to test whether stablecoin settlement can plug into existing corporate treasury operations without forcing changes to governance, compliance, or accounting procedures.

In Tether’s description of the workflow, Hyundai Motor America converted the funds into USDT, transferred the stablecoin to Hyundai Motor Mexico, and then converted it back into US dollars. Tether said the transfer and verification cycle took about seven minutes—materially faster than a traditional cross-border bank transfer, which it characterized as typically taking three to four hours or longer.

Key takeaways

  • Hyundai Motor completed a $20,000 US-to-Mexico treasury payment using USDT settled in about seven minutes on Avalanche, according to Tether.
  • Tether said the proof of concept is designed to fit inside existing corporate treasury governance, compliance, and accounting controls.
  • The pilot relied on Axiym’s settlement infrastructure, with Hyundai Card handling remittance structure and the compliance and operational requirements.
  • Both companies plan to broaden testing to more payment corridors and include local-currency settlements in the next phase.
  • Broader market momentum is pushing stablecoin tooling toward enterprise treasury use cases, including liquidity management and intercompany settlement.

Seven-minute settlement aims at “treasury-ready” stablecoin payments

The significance of Hyundai’s pilot lies less in raw settlement speed—though the reported seven-minute end-to-end timeline is notable—and more in the attempt to make stablecoin settlement operationally compatible with established corporate processes. Tether said the exercise was built to evaluate stablecoin-based settlement integration into corporate treasury workflows without requiring changes to governance, compliance, or accounting structures.

That distinction matters because enterprise treasury teams generally cannot treat settlement as an experimental black box. They need controls for regulatory compliance, auditability for accounting, and operational procedures that align with internal approval chains. In the Hyundai pilot, Tether pointed to Hyundai Card as the party overseeing the remittance design, while also supporting the regulatory, compliance, accounting, and operational requirements required for the proof of concept.

Who did what in the proof of concept

Tether described a multi-party setup spanning stablecoin issuance/handling, settlement infrastructure, and corporate remittance design. According to the company, the pilot used Axiym’s settlement infrastructure to move and settle the payment on-chain, while Hyundai Card was responsible for the remittance structure and for managing the compliance and operational requirements needed to run the trial.

For investors and builders, the operational detail is a signal that stablecoin deployments are increasingly being assembled as “enterprise systems” rather than single-technology integrations. The payment flow in Tether’s account—convert to USDT, transfer, verify, and convert back—resembles what treasury operations typically require: predictable handling of funds, measurable confirmation steps, and compatibility with fiat accounting outcomes.

Next phase: more corridors and local-currency tests

The pilot is not described as a one-off settlement exercise. Tether said the project is planned to move into a next phase that expands testing to additional payment corridors and local currency settlements as Hyundai and its partners evaluate broader enterprise treasury workflows.

This expansion is important because cross-border payments vary widely in terms of local banking rails, regulatory requirements, and operational constraints. Broadening corridor coverage and incorporating local currency settlement would test whether the model can scale beyond the specific US-to-Mexico scenario and whether additional fiat conversions and compliance layers can be handled within the same operational framework.

Why corporate treasury is becoming a focal point

Hyundai’s pilot fits into a wider push by stablecoin firms and infrastructure providers toward enterprise treasury applications. Corporate treasury—covering cross-border payments, liquidity management, and intercompany settlement—has become a key target because enterprises often have recurring payment flows and measurable efficiency goals.

One recent example cited in the broader market discussion: in April, Kyriba partnered with Circle to integrate USDC into Kyriba’s enterprise treasury platform. The partnership focused on enabling treasury teams to manage stablecoin balances alongside cash positions and to settle eligible cross-border and intercompany payments in near-real time using treasury workflows and approval controls. That effort reflects the same underlying theme as the Hyundai pilot: stablecoins should fit into existing treasury decisioning rather than requiring new operational governance.

Demand signals also point toward growth in real-time and treasury-oriented settlement. A Bitso Business report released earlier this month said stablecoin transaction volumes processed on its platform increased 81% year over year in the first half of 2026, with growth attributed to demand for real-time settlement, treasury management, and cross-border liquidity solutions. The report also indicated that more than 60% of new business clients onboarded during the period were financial institutions, including banks and licensed payment providers.

Meanwhile, enterprise adoption surveys are beginning to reflect planning rather than purely experimental trials. A June Paybis report found that 22.5% of surveyed businesses already use stablecoins for international payments or plan to within the next 12 months. The report also cited McKinsey research suggesting that business-to-business transactions account for roughly 60% of estimated global stablecoin payment volume in 2025, with total volume cited at about $390 billion.

At the market level, stablecoin supply continues to expand. DefiLlama data, as cited in the discussion, put total stablecoin market capitalization at approximately $312.3 billion, up about 21.5% from $257.1 billion a year earlier. USDT remains the largest stablecoin by market value, underscoring why it often appears in enterprise and payment experiments.

For now, what to watch is whether pilots like Hyundai’s move from isolated corridor tests into repeatable treasury workflows across multiple regions and currencies—especially as companies attempt to keep governance, compliance, and accounting processes unchanged while increasing automation and settlement coverage.

This article was originally published as Hyundai Finishes USDT Treasury Settlement Pilot for US–Mexico Trade on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.