USDPT, Western Union’s stablecoin expected as soon as next month

By Cointribune EN
about 5 hours ago
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The global money transfer giant no longer just watches the crypto revolution from afar: it is stepping in fully. Western Union is preparing to launch next month its stablecoin USDPT, built on the Solana blockchain. A decision that could reshuffle the cards in the cross-border payments market.

In brief

  • Western Union will launch its USDPT stablecoin on Solana next month, issued by Anchorage Digital Bank.
  • USDPT targets settlements between agents, partly replacing the SWIFT network.
  • A ‘Stable Card’ will allow consumers to spend stablecoins in dozens of markets by the end of the year.

Western Union bets on Solana to modernize its settlements

Next month, Western Union crosses a decisive milestone. During its teleconference on the first quarter 2026 results, the group confirmed the imminent launch of USDPT, its stablecoin pegged to the US dollar, built on the Solana blockchain and issued by Anchorage Digital Bank.

The target is clear: operational settlements between agents, not retail transactions.

Initially announced in October 2025, USDPT positions itself as a direct alternative to SWIFT for internal financial flows within Western Union’s global network. Devin McGranahan, CEO of the company, was unambiguous during the presentation: 

It’s no longer about whether Western Union will be active in digital assets, but how fast we can grow.

This choice of Solana is deliberate. The blockchain offers near-instantaneous transactions, negligible fees, and the capacity to handle massive volumes. For a network like Western Union, present in more than 200 countries, it’s a tailor-made infrastructure to streamline thousands of daily settlements, often still processed through slow and costly correspondent banking circuits.

This initiative is also part of a broader sectoral dynamic. Wells Fargo recently filed the WFUSD trademark, and Citi is reportedly considering its own stablecoin for cross-border payments. Even Morgan Stanley launched a money market fund dedicated to stablecoin reserves, the MSNXX, a sign that Wall Street no longer watches crypto from afar. It is now taking the reins behind the scenes.

A “Stable Card” and a digital ecosystem under construction

Beyond the institutional aspect, Western Union is also targeting the general public. The company plans to launch later this year a “USD Stable Card” in “dozens of markets.” Concrete in its ambition, this card will allow consumers to hold value in stablecoins and spend it worldwide, directly.

McGranahan describes the Stable Card as “a consumer-facing expression, linking USDPT, digital assets, retail customers, and global spending into a unique and integrated experience.”

The stakes are particularly high in markets exposed to inflation, where holding dollar-denominated value, instantly accessible, represents real protection for millions of people.

To complete the picture, Western Union is also deploying its Digital Asset Network (DAN), whose first partner joined this week. This network aims to connect existing crypto wallets to Western Union’s physical points of sale, enabling users to convert their digital assets into local currency in moments.

The coherence of the strategy is striking:

  • USDPT streamlines settlements between agents via blockchain.
  • DAN links crypto wallets to the global physical network.
  • The Stable Card gives consumers direct access to stablecoins in their daily lives.

Three components. One ecosystem.

In short, Western Union is doing what many traditional banks still hesitate to do: integrating stablecoins at the heart of its operational model. With USDPT on Solana, the Stable Card, and the DAN network, the group is not following a trend; it seeks to structure it. In a sector where compliance becomes a competitive weapon, those who act now will gain a lead difficult to catch up with.

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