Mastercard Nears Zerohash Deal as Competition Intensifies
Mastercard is near a deal to acquire Zerohash for up to $2 billion, aiming to control stablecoin settlement infrastructure as banks and payment firms adopt tokenized deposits and blockchain-based transactions.
According to several people with direct knowledge of the discussions, Mastercard is nearing a deal to acquire Zerohash in a transaction valued between $1.5 billion and $2 billion. The acquisition would mark Mastercard’s most direct push into stablecoin infrastructure.
The talks come as global payments firms race to capture new revenue from blockchain-based settlement. Clearer regulatory standards in the United States and Europe have allowed conventional institutions to build regulated digital-asset products.
Infrastructure Push Gains Speed
Zerohash builds API-driven tools that help banks, fintechs, and brokerages embed crypto trading, tokenization, and stablecoin transfers. In April, the company reported that its platform supported over $2 billion in tokenized fund flows during the previous four months, reflecting growing institutional demand.
Industry sources say Mastercard wants direct control over that infrastructure rather than a loose integration deal. Fortune first reported the negotiations on Wednesday, as part of the payments network’s broader push to scale regulated digital-asset services. Zerohash also powers tokenized fund infrastructure for BlackRock’s BUIDL and Franklin Templeton’s BENJI Token, according to the company.
The potential acquisition follows separate talks involving BVNK, a London-based stablecoin startup. That deal was valued at $2 billion, but Coinbase moved into exclusivity with BVNK, limiting competing bids, according to people familiar with those discussions.
What a way to kick off ! zerohash was awarded the Money20/20 Gold Award for PaymentsOur onchain infrastructure powers innovators like Stripe, Felix, Bolt, and BlackRock BUIDL to build the future of payments.Thank you to our partners for the trust and collaboration
— zerohash (@ZeroHashX) October 27, 2025
Mastercard has been active in crypto services for several years, including card programs with major exchanges. Its recent focus on stablecoin settlement signals a shift in strategy. Rather than supporting consumer-facing wallets, Mastercard appears to be building the plumbing for regulated blockchain payments.
Why It Matters for Payments
A successful takeover could reshape how Mastercard manages cross-border transactions. By owning regulated infrastructure, the company may settle stablecoin transfers on its network without relying on outside partners. That model could attract banks that want blockchain settlement but cannot run custody or tokenization in-house.
Recent industry moves show momentum. In May, Citi processed tokenized deposits for a corporate treasury pilot, settling cross-border payments within minutes instead of days. JPMorgan rebranded its Onyx blockchain platform to Kynexis and began rolling out on-chain FX settlement for USD and EUR in early 2025, giving multinational clients faster clearing and transparent liquidity. These developments have pushed payment networks to find regulated infrastructure partners, adding urgency to Mastercard’s interest in Zerohash.
Mastercard stock performance YTD / Source: Yahoo Finance
Analysts say a Zerohash deal may help Mastercard avoid being boxed out as regulated stablecoins scale into payroll, treasury, and remittance markets. Mastercard would gain a turnkey stack for payments and tokenized assets if the deal closes.
Visa has also moved deeper into stablecoin banking. On September 30, the company announced a funding pilot through Visa Direct that uses stablecoins for business prefunding, showing how major networks are preparing for on-chain settlement.
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.
You may also like
African payment giant Flutterwave taps Polygon blockchain for cross-border payments

Uphold relaunches XRP rewards debit card in the US with up to 10% back for users

Garden Finance exploit: over $5.5M stolen, 10% white hat bounty announced

Jiuzi Holdings taps SOLV Foundation for its $1B Bitcoin investment plan

