Western Union Says Stablecoins Are faster and cheaper

Financial services company Western Union is set to pilot a stablecoin-based settlement system to modernize its remittance operations for its more than 150 million customers.

During Western Union’s third-quarter earnings call on Thursday, CEO Devin McGranahan said the pilot is “focused on leveraging onchain settlement rails to reduce dependency on legacy correspondent banking systems, shorten settlement windows, and improve capital efficiency.”

“We see significant opportunities for us to be able to move money faster with greater transparency and at lower cost without compromising compliance or customer trust.”

Western Union processes around 70 million transfers each quarter. Blockchain technology could offer significant advantages over traditional remittance rails and could benefit its customers located in more than 200 countries.

The remittance platform’s latest remarks on crypto come a little over three months after it first hinted at plans to integrate stablecoins for cross-border transfers.

McGranahan said Western Union initially refrained from crypto due to concerns around volatility, regulatory uncertainty and customer protection — however, passage of the GENIUS Act has changed that course.