Analysis: Companies like Circle and Stripe are building proprietary blockchains to establish their own settlement channels, aiming to enhance the efficiency, compliance, and revenue of digital asset payments
According to ChainCatcher, as reported by CoinDesk, Circle and Stripe are building their own proprietary blockchains, joining a growing number of projects aiming to launch chains for stablecoins and tokenized assets. Startups Plasma and Stable have both recently raised funds to develop dedicated chains for USDT (USDT).
Securitize is collaborating with Ethena to build Converge, Ondo Finance announced earlier this year that it would soon launch an internal chain, and just a few days ago, Dinari stated it would soon roll out a layer-1 network powered by Avalanche for the clearing and settlement of tokenized stocks.
Martin Burgherr, Chief Clients Officer at crypto bank Sygnum, said, “Building your own L1 is about control and strategic positioning. The economics of stablecoins are determined by settlement speed, interoperability, and regulatory alignment, so owning the base layer allows companies to embed compliance directly, integrate FX engines, and ensure predictable fees.”
There are also defensive motivations. “Today, stablecoin issuers rely on Ethereum, Tron, or other stablecoins for settlement,” Burgherr said. “This reliance means they are exposed to external fee markets, protocol governance decisions, and technical bottlenecks.”
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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