The younger generation of newly formed businesses aimed at resolving cross-border payments focus on Stablecoins encryption-often associated with real coins or other goods to help them maintain stable prices-build solutions that work faster and often cheaper than Economic rails. This trend also leads to an increase in investor interest in Fintech.
Last Development is Cedar moneyA US -based start -up, recently closed $ 9.9 million in seed funding led by the World Investor of Fintech Qed Investors involving grids, NIV, Stellar and Wischoff Ventures.
Like many cross -border platforms using Stablecoins, Cedar Money acts as a bridge. Businesses and individuals are trading using a Fiat -based website, while Stablecoin transactions run in the background. Cedar Money plans to reduce payment infrastructure and tackle ineffectiveness in international payments with this funding, he said.
These ineffectiveness are particularly painful in Africa, where businesses face higher trading fees and hidden costs in currency conversions due to additional risk and cost of cooperation with local banking. Banks benefit from foreign exchange rates, adding another layer of expense. “If you look at the Swift network, the fees worldwide are about 2-3%, but in Africa, they are much higher. It’s even more gouging in places where people have less money”, founder and chief executive Benji Feinberg said to TechCrunch.
Feinberg founded Cedar’s money in 2022 after nearly a decade leading an alternative funding provider. Before starting his last business, he spent the time to find the next “big” opportunity on Fintech, eventually focusing on payments and blockchain.
While Stablecoins have struggled to gain traction in the US due to cases of limited use and competition with traditional systems such as dollar and Swift, Feinberg recognized a different reality in emerging markets.
Businesses throughout Africa, the Middle East and South America need dollars to pay for imports, even when buying from countries such as China. In countries such as Nigeria or Argentina, acquiring dollars can be a race due to weak local coins such as Naira or Argentina peso.
Cedar Money began in early 2024, starting with businesses in Nigeria, helping businesses in the country accept and send money to others worldwide. “You want to go to a place where you can solve a big problem and adoption will be easier. That is why we started in Africa – because the need is bigger here,” the CEO said.
However, despite their popularity, Stablecoin platforms face limitations that may affect their scale in all markets.
Fenberg, when asked, explained that while constructing the payment rails – turning Fiat into stablecoins, transporting them and turning back – it is provocative, not exactly pioneering. According to him, the real difficulty and where the Cedar’s money is trying to lie to the construction of compliance rails to accommodate the unique regulatory requirements of each country and the extensive documentation of banks to secure legal transactions.
These requirements are particularly difficult in markets such as Africa, where infrastructure differences make seemingly simple demands – such as providing a road address – much more challenging.
Feinberg claimed that the winners in this area will be the ones who can escalate their activities worldwide while navigating complex compliance requirements, especially in areas not covered.
“I would say that the biggest challenge is to train banks in the developed world where the funds they get from the underdeveloped world are good. It’s a challenge, but we do it.”
However, the US is setting the tone for a favorable regulatory feeling to digital assets that could facilitate compliance. Many industry interested believe that this event, in combination with others, such as the acquisition of Stablecoin Startup Bridge, will not only cause a broader acceptance of Stablecoin payments, but also to make banks and regulators worldwide and in emerging markets to markets. relax their strong views on adopting Stablecoin.
This adoption begins to reshape the landscape of world payments. Data from the A16Z and other sources clearly illustrate: in 2017, the volumes of Stablecoin transactions were negligible compared to traditional systems. Fast forward to the present day, and Stablecoins have exceeded Mastercard, PayPal and Visa. In Q2 2024, Stablecoin transactions reached $ 8.5 trillion in 1 billion transactions compared to $ 3.9 trillion in volume in 50 times more transactions, according to one Report A16Z.
Cedar Money, founded a year ago, processes tens of millions in monthly transaction volumes focusing on import and export companies that handle tangible goods such as rice and shoes, supported by bona fide invoices, an approach that simplifies banks as well as transactions as transactions They include clear documentation and natural products, according to Feinberg, who refused to share customer numbers.
QED Investors’ partner Gbenga Ajayi, saying why the World Company Fintech invested in Cedar Money, says Fintech is “uniquely positioned to cope with the ineffectiveness of the global financial system”.
The payment company, which has 14 employees across Nigeria, the US, Israel and Serbia, is the fourth investment of investors focusing on Africa after Moniepoint, Precium and Refedial Health.
Cedar Money unites a growing list of players such as Conduit and Caliza, who serve businesses in emerging markets with Stablecoin. However, despite the growing relevance, reaching the maximum of $ 205 billion in the market last year, Feinberg says the collective share of international payments remains small, so Cedar Money has no direct competition at this stage.
“Today, two-thirds of international payments are made through the Banking Network. 5% are the Fiat pioneers, and 0.01% are Stablecoins Guys. Because the market is so great. “