In brief
- Mastercard has secured a highly coveted NYDFS BitLicense, anchoring its compliance-first strategy on Wall Street.
- The payments giant is aggressively funding its digital asset footprint, underscored by its efforts to acquire crypto infrastructure firm BVNK.
- Mastercard is actively defending its market dominance by integrating stablecoins into traditional banking via firms like SoFi.
Mastercard said that it secured a BitLicense from the New York Department of Financial Services on Wednesday, planting a flag on Wall Street while welcoming rigid standards enforced under one of crypto’s strictest U.S. licensing frameworks.
The move highlights Mastercard’s focus on regulatory compliance in a sector gaining steam among financial incumbents. The company described the measure in a blog post as part of its long-term strategy for supporting stablecoins and tokenized deposits.
“Clear regulatory frameworks play an important role in building trust and confidence,” Mastercard Chief Product Officer Jorn Lambert said in a statement. “This approval underscores our focus on aligning innovation with regulatory expectations.”
Mastercard noted that the NYDFS requires crypto companies to comply with rules that span consumer protection, cybersecurity, financial integrity, and operational resilience. Established in 2015, the framework has inspired rules since adopted by other states.
Although the regulator’s rules were crafted with crypto-native firms in mind, Mastercard’s efforts mark a careful walk along the path of innovation. The pace hastened last year among many firms following the passage of the GENIUS Act, which enshrined stablecoins into federal law.
Obtaining a BitLicense is famously difficult and expensive, but the company that processes around $9.5 trillion in annual payments has already allocated significant resources towards stablecoins and the technology more broadly.
In March, Mastercard said that it was set to acquire infrastructure firm BVNK for $1.8 billion, eager to pay top dollar for a company that enables businesses across the globe to send, receive, convert, and store stablecoins.
As fintechs increasingly leverage stablecoins to modernize payments and treasury operations, Mastercard has actively expanded its network, working to cement decades of dominance by bridging the gap between digital assets and traditional fiat rails.
Earlier this year, for example, SoFi Technologies partnered with Mastercard, enabling the online-only bank’s stablecoin to settle across Mastercard’s global payments network. Meanwhile, the intermediary has collaborated with crypto-natives like MetaMask and MoonPay, allowing customers to spend stablecoins at millions of merchant locations.
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