Dallas, United States — April 15, 2026 — MoneyGram has partnered with fintech firm NALA to introduce stablecoin-based settlement for cross-border payouts, targeting remittance corridors across Africa and Asia. The move brings digital dollar settlement into live payment flows while keeping payouts in local currencies.
Under the arrangement, transactions will be settled using stablecoins on the backend, while recipients continue to receive funds through local payout networks. The structure is designed to reduce delays and costs linked to traditional correspondent banking systems.
Real-Time Settlement Targets Friction in Key Corridors
The partnership introduces a real-time settlement model aimed at improving transaction speed and reducing reliance on intermediaries. In several emerging markets, cross-border transfers can still take days to settle, particularly where liquidity constraints and fragmented banking networks exist.
The focus is on high-volume remittance corridors across Africa and Asia, where demand for faster and lower-cost transfers remains strong. MoneyGram’s global payout network will be combined with NALA’s fintech infrastructure to support these flows. The companies did not disclose rollout timelines or transaction volumes.
Stablecoins Move Into Operational Payment Flows
Stablecoins are increasingly being used in live payment environments, particularly where settlement speed and liquidity management are critical. In this case, they are being deployed as a backend layer, handling value transfer without changing the user experience.
Instead of replacing existing systems, the model works alongside them. Settlement becomes faster, less dependent on banking hours, and more efficient from a capital perspective across multiple markets.
MoneyGram is a global payments company offering money transfer and financial services across international markets. NALA is a fintech company focused on cross-border payments and remittance infrastructure in emerging markets.
The development reflects a broader shift in cross-border payments, where digital asset-backed settlement is moving into practical use across regulated financial services.
Digital Trade Outlook Analysis
Stablecoin-based settlement is starting to reshape how cross-border liquidity is managed, especially in remittance corridors linked to trade activity. Faster settlement cycles reduce capital friction and improve efficiency across payment networks. As adoption expands, this model could extend into transaction banking and trade finance infrastructure.
Source: MoneyGram
