Stablecoins Push Forward With US Bank Testing Payments On Stellar

Stablecoins

Stablecoins will soon find their way into US Bancorp’s systems as the lender has begun testing a bank-backed digital currency on the Stellar public blockchain, according to announcements made this week.

The effort is being run with help from the Stellar Development Foundation and consulting firm PwC, and it is being described as an experiment in how a mainstream bank might move dollars on a public ledger.

Stablecoins: Pilot Includes PwC And Stellar Support

According to the bank and project partners, the pilot examines features that matter to regulated finance, such as the ability to freeze an asset or unwind a transaction when needed.

Mike Villano, who leads digital-assets work at US Bancorp, said these controls are a major reason the bank is testing Stellar rather than an alternative chain.

Reports have disclosed that the work was discussed publicly during a Money 20/20 podcast featuring executives from US Bancorp, PwC and the Stellar Development Foundation.

Stellar Offers Quick, Low-Cost Settlements

Based on Stellar’s own technical notes, transactions on the network confirm in about three–five seconds on average.

The network also advertises very small fees — the average cost per operation is listed as roughly $0.000005 — and built-in account controls that let issuers add KYC, freeze and clawback options.

Those properties are exactly what US Bancorp says it wants to test for regulated payments and custody use cases.

Bank Expands Its Digital-Assets Unit

US Bancorp has already moved to put more resources behind crypto and token work. Last month the bank announced a dedicated unit focused on stablecoins and money movement, a signal that stablecoin trials are part of a broader push to build on-chain services.

Reports tie some of the momentum in the sector to warmer political winds from US President Donald Trump and other developments that have made executives more willing to explore tokenized cash and securities.

Total crypto market cap at $2.96 trillion on the daily chart: TradingView

The bank has not named a rollout date or said whether the pilot is for institutional partners only or for a wider set of customers.

Stablecoins: What This Means For Customers And Markets

Based on reports and the technical detail published by Stellar, the pilot is set up more as a compliance-first test than a bet on speculative trading.

US Bancorp is treating the stablecoins pilot as an extension of payments and custody services, not a retail crypto product for consumers right now.

Market participants will watch whether the trial shows that a public blockchain can meet bank rules without losing the ability to correct mistakes or follow court orders.

Featured image from Global Finance Magazine, chart from TradingView

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