Open Standard announced Open USD on June 30, 2026, unveiling a new stablecoin for global money movement backed by more than 140 businesses, with Visa, Stripe, Coinbase and BlackRock among the
Open Standard announced Open USD on June 30, 2026, unveiling a new stablecoin for global money movement backed by more than 140 businesses, with Visa, Stripe, Coinbase and BlackRock among the named participants.
Open Standard CEO Zach Abrams said the company is “thrilled to bring together over 140 businesses to launch Open USD,” according to the official launch announcement. The coalition spans payments processors, crypto exchanges and asset managers. For related coverage, see MoonPay Korean Won Stablecoin Push in South Korea.
Businesses can mint and redeem Open USD at no cost, while partners receive reserve earnings less a small management fee. Open Standard says reserves are maintained at major financial institutions in compliance with U.S. regulatory requirements.
The Wall Street Journal independently confirmed that some 140 companies have signed up to use the stablecoin, which is slated to launch later this year on Base, Solana and other networks.
Why This Stablecoin Coalition Stands Out
The participant list reads differently from most stablecoin launches. Visa and Stripe bring payments infrastructure that reaches hundreds of millions of merchants. BlackRock manages trillions of dollars in assets. Coinbase operates one of the largest regulated crypto exchanges in the United States.
That cross-industry backing gives Open USD a credibility profile that purely crypto-native stablecoin projects rarely assemble at launch. Visa has already been exploring stablecoin distribution through Coinbase’s Base and Polygon, signaling a sustained institutional push into dollar-denominated digital assets.
The announcement arrives as incumbent U.S.-dollar stablecoins hold significant market share. USDC, the leading regulated competitor, carried a market cap of roughly $73.37 billion at the time of research.
USDC market cap $73.37B USDC’s market cap was about $73.37 billion at the time of research, giving readers a size benchmark for the incumbent U.S.-dollar stablecoin market. Source: CoinGecko.
Open USD will need to carve share from that established base, but the zero-cost minting model and reserve-earnings distribution could differentiate it from existing issuers that retain most yield internally.
The stablecoin race is not limited to U.S. dollar instruments. UBS and five Swiss banks have been exploring a Swiss franc stablecoin, while Ripple partnered with SBI Group for a stablecoin launch in Japan. The pattern suggests institutional appetite for regulated, fiat-backed digital currencies is broadening across geographies.
Broader crypto market sentiment remained subdued during the announcement window. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index sat at 11, deep in “Extreme Fear” territory.
Crypto Fear & Greed Index 11 The Crypto Fear & Greed Index read 11, labeled Extreme Fear, showing the broader digital-asset market remained risk-off during the Open USD launch news cycle. Source: Alternative.me.
That risk-off backdrop means the consortium launch is landing during a period of caution rather than euphoria, which could temper early adoption momentum but also underscores the long-term institutional conviction behind the project.
What to Watch Next Around Open USD
The announcement confirmed the coalition and the economic model, but several operational details remain ahead. The WSJ report indicated Open USD will be offered on Base, Solana and other networks later this year, meaning chain-specific launch dates and integration timelines are still pending.
How the 140-plus partners actually deploy Open USD in their products will matter more than the headline count. Whether Visa integrates it alongside existing crypto reward programs or Stripe embeds it in merchant checkout flows will determine real transaction volume.
Reserve transparency will also be a key differentiator. Open Standard has stated compliance with U.S. regulatory requirements and custody at major financial institutions, but the specifics of attestation frequency and reserve composition have not yet been detailed publicly.
The stablecoin market has shown that headline partnerships do not guarantee adoption. Readers should track on-chain supply growth, integration announcements from individual partners and any regulatory filings as Open USD moves from announcement to live product.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
The article Visa, Stripe, Coinbase and BlackRock Back Open USD Stablecoin first featured on theccpress.com.