Movement gains access to US, Canada, EU payment rails

Movement announced it has secured access to licensed payment systems in the US, Canada and European Union. The blockchain project is shifting focus to stablecoin-based payments and remittances.

The company behind Movement said Tuesday that it had secured access to licensed payment systems in the US, Canada and European Union. It plans to use these rails alongside blockchain settlement for cross-border transfers and dollar savings products. Movement is pivoting from its original role as a layer-2 network linking Move-language blockchains to Ethereum. The change targets the roughly $685 billion remittance market in low- and middle-income countries. As part of the transition, the Movement Network Foundation repurchased 19 percent of tokens previously allocated to investors, equal to 4.1 percent of total supply. The MOVE token was recently trading around 14.35 cents. 'Billions globally are financially disenfranchised and unserved,' CEO Torab Torabi said in a press release. 'Our mission is to marry licensed payment rails with onchain settlement to modernize financial services globally, particularly in emerging markets.'

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Illustration of Mastercard securing BitLicense approval in New York for stablecoins, featuring a handshake in a Manhattan office with digital tokens and skyline view.
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Mastercard secures new york bitlicense for stablecoins

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Mastercard has obtained a BitLicense from New York regulators to expand its digital asset activities. The approval covers stablecoins and tokenized payment infrastructure.

Ripple has emphasized that institutions need infrastructure supporting multiple stablecoins for cross-border payments as volumes surge. Global stablecoin transactions reached $33 trillion in 2025, surpassing credit card volumes, according to the company. Early adopters of flexible platforms are positioned ahead amid regulatory shifts.

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Brazil's central bank has banned electronic foreign exchange providers from using stablecoins and cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin for settling overseas remittances. The new rule, BCB Resolution No. 561, takes effect on October 1. Individual investors can still buy, hold, and trade crypto through authorized providers.

EU finance ministers and the ECB discussed ways to bolster euro-denominated stablecoins during a meeting in Nicosia last week. Officials expressed concerns that dollar-backed tokens could weaken European banks and monetary policy control. The ECB rejected proposals for relaxed liquidity rules or central bank backstops.

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