Anchorage launches bank-focused stablecoin settlement platform for USD transfers
Anchorage Digital is pushing deeper into the “stablecoins for banks” lane. The company said it has launched Stablecoin Solutions for Banks, a new offering aimed at licensed international banks that want to handle cross-border U.S. dollar transfers using stablecoin rails under U.S. federal oversight. Anchorage is pitching it as a single platform that combines stablecoin issuance access, custody, fiat accounts, and settlement tools.
A bank-facing stablecoin stack, not just custody
Anchorage’s message here is bigger than wallet support. The company says participating banks can onboard with Anchorage Digital Bank, N.A. and get access to both stablecoin and fiat wallets/accounts for inbound and outbound USD transfers.
It also says the platform bundles several functions into one workflow: minting and redemption, custody, fiat treasury management, and settlement. In practice, Anchorage is trying to sell banks a “one counterparty” model instead of stitching together multiple vendors across custody, payments, and treasury operations.
The core pitch: replace slow correspondent banking rails
Anchorage is explicitly targeting pain points in traditional cross-border banking.
The company says banks can use the platform for near-instant USD stablecoin transfers on supported chains, while still supporting third-party wire transfers to U.S. and international destinations. It also highlights “network fee protection options” designed to preserve principal value.
The bigger claim is operational: Anchorage says banks can reduce reliance on correspondent banking and pre-funded nostro/vostro accounts, replacing trapped liquidity with programmable stablecoin balances and cutting settlement timelines from days to minutes.
Federal oversight and the compliance angle
Anchorage is leaning hard on regulation in this launch.
The company says Anchorage Digital Bank operates as a federally chartered trust bank under oversight from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), and frames that as a cleaner path than dealing with fragmented state-by-state licensing. It also says client assets are held in bankruptcy-remote, segregated accounts.
That matters because this product is clearly aimed at institutions that care less about “crypto access” and more about whether the custody and settlement stack fits internal compliance and risk requirements. (That framing is Anchorage’s, but it matches how the announcement is written.)
Stablecoin-agnostic rails, with named issuers already listed
Anchorage says the platform is stablecoin-agnostic and supports leading USD stablecoins across major chains. It also says the system offers primary mint and redeem access for federally issued stablecoins as U.S. rules evolve.
In the announcement, Anchorage specifically names stablecoins it says can be natively minted and redeemed through Anchorage Digital Bank, including Tether’s USA₮, Ethena Labs’ USDtb, OSL’s USDGO, and an upcoming Western Union USDPT issuance.
That list is notable because it shows Anchorage positioning itself as a hub for multiple issuers, not just a single-coin rail.
Why now: banks want programmable dollars, but with guardrails
Anchorage ties the timing to two things: rising stablecoin settlement volumes and improving U.S. regulatory clarity.
CEO Nathan McCauley describes stablecoins as becoming “core financial infrastructure,” and frames the launch as a way for banks to move dollars globally over blockchain rails without giving up on custody, compliance, or operational control. The company also says the platform is meant to connect participants into a shared ecosystem of regulated counterparties.
Why it matters for crypto
- This is another sign that stablecoins are being packaged as banking infrastructure, not just exchange liquidity or consumer payments tools.
- Anchorage is competing on regulatory structure + product integration: one federally regulated counterparty for custody, mint/redeem, fiat management, and settlement.
- The named stablecoin issuers show how the market may evolve toward multi-issuer bank access instead of one-bank/one-coin silos.
- If banks actually reduce reliance on pre-funded correspondent accounts, stablecoins could start changing treasury and liquidity operations—not just frontend payments UX.
What to watch next
- Which licensed international banks actually onboard first, and whether Anchorage discloses early corridors or use cases.
- How fast the platform expands support for additional stablecoins and chains under its “stablecoin-agnostic” model.
- Whether U.S. stablecoin legislation (which Anchorage references) materially changes what “federally issued” mint/redeem access looks like in practice.
- If other custody banks and infrastructure providers launch competing all-in-one settlement stacks for banks, which would validate this as a real institutional category.