Crypto firm Anchorage Digital has struck a cross-border payments partnership with Mexican conglomerate Grupo Salinas.
The deal connects Anchorage’s USD-pegged stablecoin rails to Grupo Salinas’s financial operations in Mexico.

Through the conglomerate’s crypto arm, Coinpro, the integration targets faster dollar settlement across borders.
The partnership marks another step in Anchorage’s push to bring regulated stablecoin infrastructure into mainstream financial institutions.
Anchorage Digital is a federally chartered crypto bank based in the United States. That regulatory standing gives it a distinct position when approaching large financial institutions.
Its “Stablecoin Solutions for Banks” product offers a compliant pathway for settling payments in USD-pegged stablecoins.
Through this partnership, Coinpro will embed Anchorage’s blockchain rails directly into its cross-border payment flows.
Moreover, Anchorage confirmed the integration will “compress settlement cycles” for dollar movement across borders. Real-time, programmable dollar transactions become possible through this infrastructure.
Anchorage CEO Nathan McCauley spoke directly to the shift the firm is driving. “Stablecoins are evolving from a trading instrument into core financial infrastructure,” McCauley said.
He added that the partnership gives institutions “a secure and federally regulated way to move dollars globally using blockchain rails.”
At the same time, Grupo Salinas also operates Banco Azteca, giving the conglomerate a deep footprint in Mexican retail banking.
Connecting that network to Anchorage’s stablecoin rails extends blockchain-based settlement into an already active financial ecosystem. The partnership bridges crypto infrastructure with an established, high-volume banking operation.
Anchorage has been actively growing its stablecoin partner network across different payment corridors.
Earlier, Western Union launched a U.S. dollar stablecoin on the Solana blockchain, issued directly by Anchorage Digital. The Grupo Salinas deal follows that pattern of targeting partners with large transaction volumes.
Grupo Salinas executive Carlos Díaz Alonso outlined what the partnership means on the ground. He said the two firms would focus on “co-developing more efficient channels that benefit Grupo Elektra’s customers and users.”
Consequently, that consumer-facing scope means the deal could affect everyday cross-border transactions across Mexico.
Grupo Salinas is controlled by billionaire Ricardo Salinas Pliego, a well-known bitcoin advocate. His alignment with digital assets makes the conglomerate a natural institutional partner for a crypto-native firm like Anchorage.
McCauley noted that “Grupo Salinas shares our conviction that digital dollars will power the next generation of cross-border finance.”
Cross-border dollar payments between Mexico and the United States represent one of the world’s largest remittance corridors.
Therefore, Anchorage’s entry into that space through a conglomerate of Grupo Salinas’s scale carries practical weight. The partnership positions the crypto firm closer to where real payment volume actually flows.
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