Banking Circle is pushing further into Europe’s stablecoin settlement race, expanding its digital asset payment rails just as MiCA starts turning regulatory theory into actual market structure.
The bank said Monday that its rollout now includes support for Circle’s USDC, Paxos’ USDG and EURI, Banking Circle’s own euro stablecoin. That widens the service beyond the bank’s initial EURI launch in August 2024, when it introduced what it described as the first bank-backed MiCA-compliant euro stablecoin in the EU.
The significance here is less about launching another coin and more about offering a regulated bank layer where institutions can move between fiat and stablecoins more easily. Banking Circle said the service is designed for fiat-to-stablecoin and stablecoin-to-fiat settlement, giving clients a more direct route into digital asset transfers through the bank’s existing infrastructure.
That matters because Banking Circle is not a niche player. The bank says it serves more than 750 payment companies, financial institutions and marketplaces, handling over €1.5 trillion annually across its network. Chief digital assets officer Kirit Bhatia said stablecoins are “a natural extension” of that infrastructure and central to lowering costs and improving efficiency.
The launch comes after Banking Circle secured a CASP licence in Luxembourg on April 15, giving it a clearer regulatory footing as Europe’s banks, fintechs and crypto-native firms compete to own the settlement layer of MiCA-era payments.
That is the larger shift underway. Europe’s stablecoin market is no longer only about issuers trying to get compliant. It is increasingly about which institutions can turn compliance into usable payment infrastructure. Banking Circle is clearly trying to be one of them.
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