Stripe is planning to apply for a charter with a federal banking regulator to meet the requirements of new U.S. stablecoin legislation, which will allow it to keep issuing stablecoins for clients when the law takes effect. The company is preparing to apply for a national trust charter with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, said Zach Abrams, co-founder and CEO of Bridge, the stablecoin infrastructure firm that was acquired by Stripe in a $1.1 billion deal this year. Stripe is also planning to apply for a trust license with the New York State Department of Financial Services, he said. Stripe announced a new service today to help clients launch their own stablecoins “in days.” So far, crypto wallet providers Phantom and Metamask, as well as Native Markets for Hyperliquid, are using Stripe’s services to issue stablecoins. The move could introduce more competition to Circle and Tether, the dominant stablecoin issuers whose tokens are currently used by many of Stripe’s clients. It will also add to a rapidly increasing number of stablecoins, which are cryptocurrencies that are typically pegged to the dollar. Stripe will allow its clients to receive all the interest revenue generated from their own stablecoins, minus a fee that starts at 0.5% of assets. Stripe aims to make its stablecoin issuance service “as big as possible,” said Neetika Bansal, Stripe’s business lead for connect, money management and
crypto. She said Stripe had no specific plans yet to issue its own stablecoin.
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