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This episode explores the current state and future of stablecoins through conversations with two leading crypto infrastructure founders. Zach Abrams, CEO of Bridge, discusses building stablecoin orchestration platforms for global payments and treasury management. Henri Stern, CEO of Privy, explains how crypto wallet infrastructure is enabling embedded digital asset accounts. Both companies recently joined Stripe via acquisitions and provide unique insights into how stablecoins are moving from trading assets to core financial infrastructure. (42:00)
CEO and co-founder of Bridge, the leading stablecoin orchestration platform that enables developers to build with stablecoins. Abrams started the company in 2022 during crypto's downturn, initially focusing on NFT use cases before pivoting to stablecoin infrastructure. Bridge recently joined Stripe via acquisition and serves customers ranging from SpaceX to emerging market neobanks.
CEO and co-founder of Privy, the leading crypto wallet infrastructure company that provides embedded wallet solutions for applications. Stern previously worked in crypto before founding Privy to solve wallet user experience challenges. The company enables developers to build digital asset accounts directly into their applications rather than requiring users to manage external wallets. Privy also recently joined Stripe through acquisition.
The dominant real-world application for stablecoins today is facilitating international money transfers, particularly from emerging markets. (06:47) Bridge's first customer, Zulu, demonstrated this by converting Colombian pesos to stablecoins, transferring through Bridge's APIs, then converting to US dollars - creating a faster, cheaper alternative to traditional banking rails. This use case has proven so compelling that companies like SpaceX now use stablecoins to repatriate funds from dozens of countries back to the US, replacing complex multi-hop SWIFT transfers with simple blockchain transactions.
The infrastructure supporting stablecoin adoption has matured significantly, with robust local exchanges in Latin America, Africa, and Asia creating deep liquidity between local currencies and stablecoins like USDC and USDT. (09:03) These exchanges effectively function as alternative foreign exchange markets, enabling efficient currency conversion. However, a key limitation remains: while traditional FX markets offer better pricing for larger amounts, stablecoin markets currently see spreads widen with size, making them more efficient for startups than large enterprises.
Despite US dollars representing a smaller share of global currency balances, they comprise over 95% of stablecoin value - a phenomenon that reveals genuine market preference rather than artificial constraints. (13:49) This dominance stems from two factors: emerging market users genuinely preferring dollar-denominated assets for stability, and the business-to-business nature of most current stablecoin usage involving American companies. While local stablecoins will eventually emerge, dollar stablecoins will likely maintain outsized market share permanently due to network effects.
The traditional wallet model requiring users to manage external crypto wallets is being replaced by embedded wallet infrastructure that allows any application to provide digital asset accounts natively. (17:46) This shift enables companies to maintain longer relationships with users and build comprehensive financial services within their applications. Rather than losing customers to banks after payment, companies can now offer yield-bearing accounts, lending, and other financial products directly, creating the foundation for globally-accessible fintech super apps.
The regulatory clarity provided by recent legislation has enabled Bridge to launch an open issuance platform allowing any company to create their own stablecoins. (48:18) This addresses two key business needs: earning yield on customer deposits (currently captured entirely by existing stablecoin issuers) and maintaining control over financial infrastructure. Companies sitting on large stablecoin balances can now issue their own versions to capture the 4% yield and avoid platform dependence risks, similar to how Zynga faced changing economics on Facebook's platform.