Stables wants to make USDT payments in Asia less fragmented. The digital payments infrastructure company has integrated USDT0 into its developer platform, giving businesses a cleaner way to move Tether’s dollar stablecoin across supported blockchain networks without building their own bridge stack.
The issue is not whether stablecoins are being used. They are. Asia already accounts for roughly 60 percent of global stablecoin payment flows. The harder problem sits underneath: payment routes are split across different chains, wallets, liquidity pools, exchanges and local fiat corridors. For developers, that creates a lot of unnecessary plumbing.
A fintech may receive USDT on one network, need liquidity on another, and then pay out into a local currency through a separate corridor. Each step can add fees, settlement delays, bridge risk and operational checks. It also makes the user experience worse. A customer usually does not care which chain holds the dollar balance. They just want the payment to arrive.
USDT0 is designed to reduce that chain-level complexity. It allows USDT to move across more than 20 blockchain networks while keeping a single token standard. For developers building on Stables, the specific chain becomes less of a front-end concern. They integrate once, and the platform handles movement across the supported USDT0 environment.
That is especially useful for on-ramps and off-ramps. These flows sit between crypto liquidity and local banking or payment rails, where small frictions quickly become expensive at scale. If a business has to manage separate USDT balances across multiple networks, liquidity becomes harder to forecast and treasury operations become slower. A unified layer makes the routing less visible and, ideally, less fragile.
Stables CEO Bernardo Bilotta said the company has built an infrastructure layer for USDT in Asia and that USDT0 connects those corridors to the broader Tether network. USDT0 co-founder Lorenzo R. framed the problem as a return of old fintech headaches: fragmented systems, extra intermediaries and delays, only this time across blockchains rather than banks.
The integration is now live for developers and enterprise clients on the Stables platform. It supports immediate cross-chain functionality within the USDT0 environment.
For Stables, the move strengthens its position as an API-first payments layer for businesses using USDT across Asia. The company already provides stablecoin orchestration, compliance, liquidity and multi-currency support, with regulatory registrations or licenses in Australia, Europe and Canada.
Stablecoins are moving beyond exchange balances and trading pairs. They are becoming payment infrastructure. But for that to work properly, developers cannot spend half their time solving chain selection, liquidity routing and bridge management. They need the dollar to move in the background, almost boringly. That is the gap Stables and USDT0 are trying to close.
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