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Stables and Mansa Partner to Expand Stablecoin Settlement Infrastructure Across Asia
Stables and Mansa are trying to solve a problem that has become harder to ignore in Asia’s stablecoin market. Demand is already there. The pipes, by their own telling, still are not. The two companies announced a strategic partnership on April 15 aimed at improving stablecoin connectivity across the region, where Asia accounts for around 60% of global stablecoin flows but only about 1% of local banks currently support the technology. For a market spread across roughly 150 local currencies, that leaves a substantial infrastructure gap between stablecoin usage and the banking systems meant to connect with it. A liquidity layer for a fragmented region The partnership centers on a dedicated liquidity layer for Stables’ network of fiat-to-USDT corridors. In practical terms, that means developers and fintech firms using Stables should be able to bypass more of the friction that comes with fragmented banking relationships and settle higher-volume transactions more quickly. Mansa will provide the settlement liquidity behind that setup. Since launching in August 2024, the company says it has processed $394 million across more than 40 currency corridors. Stables, for its part, says it now handles more than $1.5 billion in annualized payment volume, positioning itself as an orchestration layer that brings compliance, banking access and settlement into a single API. Compliance and liquidity move closer together Stables is also leaning heavily on regulation as part of the message. The company said it holds licenses in Australia, Europe and Canada, and presents itself as a compliance-first alternative to looser payment rails. It handles identity checks, sanctions screening and travel rule requirements for clients, which makes the Mansa link less about product flair and more about operational depth. The broader ambition is clear enough. Stables wants to become a primary orchestration layer for the USDT ecosystem in Asia, while Mansa supplies the balance-sheet depth needed to keep corridors functioning when volumes rise or volatility hits. That combination, if it works, would make stablecoin settlement in Asia look a little less improvised and a bit more like real financial infrastructure.