Polygon Labs is reportedly looking to raise fresh capital for a new stablecoin payments venture, a move that would push the company further into infrastructure and a little further away from the more cyclical parts of crypto.
According to the report, Polygon is aiming to sell between $50 million and $100 million in equity in the new business. Marc Boiron, the company’s chief executive, is expected to lead the effort, which suggests this is not some side experiment tucked away from the main operation. It looks central.
The timing is notable. The reported fundraising discussions come during a rougher stretch for crypto markets, with trading activity and speculative momentum looking thinner than they did during the stronger phases of the cycle. Against that backdrop, a stablecoin-focused payments business offers a different kind of pitch.
Payments infrastructure tends to appeal because it leans on usage rather than pure market direction. That does not make it simple, of course. Stablecoin payments sit right in the middle of regulation, compliance, settlement design and competition from both crypto-native firms and traditional financial networks. Still, it is one of the few areas in digital assets where the industry can make a credible case for recurring real-world demand.
Boiron’s reported involvement is probably the clearest signal here. When a chief executive is slated to lead a new unit directly, it usually means the company sees it as strategic rather than optional.
For Polygon, that may matter more than the headline funding number. The network built its name around scaling infrastructure for Ethereum, but the market has changed. Tokenization, payments and stablecoin rails now attract a different sort of attention, especially from firms looking for business models less tied to trading mania.
If the raise goes ahead, Polygon would be joining a growing list of crypto companies trying to turn stablecoins from a market product into payment plumbing. That is a more crowded field than it once was, but it is also where some of the sector’s more durable revenue hopes now seem to be gathering.
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