Tether IPO, Zelle and JPM Turbocharge International Commerce with Stablecoins
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👇️ Feature: Tether IPO, Zelle and JPM Turbocharge International Commerce with Stablecoins + Digital YEN Stablecoin approved
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Shirin Unvala
Major financial institutions are continuing to lean into the burgeoning Trillion dollar stablecoin and crypto payments sector with three massive updates: The world’s leading stablecoin provider, Tether looks to be preparing for an IPO after announcing it is targeting a modest $14 Billion in revenue this year!! Meanwhile, after months of crypto-chatter, Zelle has just formally announced its plans to pilot international payment services using stablecoins. And finally, JPMorgan Chase & Co. is preparing to let institutional clients post Bitcoin and Ether as collateral for loans by late 2025, a move that underscores how quickly digital assets are being pulled into the mainstream of banking and credit.
We are seeing the cryptocurrency advocates theory of a digital and seamlessly fluid economy rolled out in real time. A recent report by Artemis Analytics notes that usage of U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoins for goods, services and transfers jumped from about US $6 billion in February 2025 to more than US $10 billion in August — roughly a 70 % rise in just six months. At that pace, annualised volume could hit north of US $120 billion.
The decision by Zelle’s parent company, Early Warning Services, which is owned by a consortium of banks that includes Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase is a major coup for the stablecoin sector. It comes hot on the heels of recent Stablecoin legislation passed by the Trump administration. The law includes laid frameworks for phased implementation of stablecoins into the regulated financial network.
Zelle processed two billion payments worth $600 billion in the first half of 2025. It serves more than 150 million users and links seven major banks — JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, PNC, Capital One, Truist, and U.S. Bank — along with 2,500 smaller institutions. An international rollout would extend that reach to remittances and cross-border transfers, bringing Zelle into direct competition with fintechs such as Wise, Remitly, PayPal’s Xoom, and the instant payment services operated by Visa and Mastercard.
Those three big headlines this morning are only the tip of this iceberg. The real shift is in how stablecoins are being applied by the likes of Zelle. Business-to-business (B2B) flows are now leading the charge. Corporate and payment-network settlements — formerly dominated by traditional rails — are increasingly implementing stablecoins. Data suggest B2B transactions now account for about two-thirds of stablecoin use, up by a lot from less than six months ago. That shift means stablecoins aren’t just new tools —they’re becoming new financial plumbing. Think about what that means.
Major financial institutions are also signaling they believe this is more than a flier. JPMorgan Chase has announced plans to allow institutional clients to use Bitcoin and Ether as loan collateral by late 2025 — a move that forces the intersection of crypto assets and traditional banking to actualize and have formal recognition.
Regulatory clarity is obviously a major component in fueling said momentum. In the U.S., the latest legislation provides institutions and issuers a clearer reference to regulation. With fewer regulatory unknowns, firms are shedding their risk aversion to deploy stablecoins in real-world operations.
Several things make this move different. First, the growth isn’t incremental — it’s accelerating exponentially. A 70% jump in six months is not rare in crypto hype-cycles, but rare in payments tech and in company revenue in general.
Second, the change in use case is meaningful. Instead of being relegated to “crypto for crypto’s sake,” stablecoins are increasingly being used to funnel high-value transactions, settle trade, and manage liquidity. And the share coming from businesses, rather than individuals, is growing.
Third, the infrastructure is morphing. It’s not just blockchain startups anymore. A mainstream payments network like Zelle riding stablecoin rails sends a clear signal: institutional adoption is underway.
Stablecoin issuers continue to command the lion's share of crypto protocol revenue, consistently capturing 60-75% of total daily revenue across major crypto categories, including lending platforms, decentralized exchanges, collateralized debt positions, and blockchain infrastructure.
This dominance reflects the sector's position as crypto's most profitable vertical, providing users with a stable foundation for trading and a reliable collateral option for exchanges and DeFi protocols. Leading Stablecoin company Tether is on track to generate $15B in profit this year with a 99% profit margin, placing it among the world's most profitable companies per employee.
This announcement comes amid rumors of an impending IPO, with a target valuation of $500 billion. Tether plans to maintain its profitability through new products, including a USAT stablecoin and a tokenized gold product, while also minting new USDT to inject liquidity into the market.
It’s not just happening in the US either. Japan yesterday introduced JPYC, the world's first yen-pegged stablecoin, fully convertible to yen and backed by savings and government bonds. Aiming to issue 10 Trillion yen in three years, it launches with no transaction fees.
For businesses, fintechs and banks, this is a good time to buy-in. If stablecoins become a meaningful settlement option, firms that ignore them risk being left behind. It affects treasury operations, supplier payments, cross-border transfers, and even rails for digital-asset collateral.
For legacy systems, this is a direct challenge. Correspondent banking, multi-day settlement cycles, high FX mark-ups — are all identified targets. If stablecoins deliver even a fraction of their promise, the system could be in for a rude awakening.
For consumers and international remittances, the promise is real: cheaper, faster transfers that are available consistently. But that promise remains unproven at scale.
The infrastructure of money is remodeling before our eyes. Rails are shifting, settlement is speeding up, and Big money is being made on stablecoins. Traditional finance may be taking a forcible step back to make room for digital-native innovation. Financial services market players will either get wise or get left in the trail of digital gold dust of the early adopters. Ignoring this isn’t just a missed opportunity — it may be a misstep. Because this time, the future of payments isn’t far off. It’s beginning now.
“Turning stablecoins into a settlement layer could reshape remittances and cross-border banking, but EWS faces regulatory risks and lingering public trust issues.”

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