Post by : Bianca Suleiman
Mastercard is reportedly in advanced negotiations to acquire Chicago-based crypto infrastructure firm Zero Hash in a deal valued between $1.5 billion and $2 billion, signaling a bold move into the heart of digital money networks.
According to people familiar with the discussions, the payments giant is looking to deepen its footprint in stablecoin and tokenized money infrastructure, a space rapidly shaping the future of financial settlements. The deal, if finalized, would mark one of Mastercard’s biggest bets on blockchain-powered payment technology.
Founded in 2017, Zero Hash provides licensed crypto and stablecoin infrastructure for banks, brokerages, and fintech platforms. The company reached a $1 billion valuation last year following a $104 million funding round led by Interactive Brokers, with backing from Morgan Stanley, SoFi, and Apollo.
Shifting From Cards to Core Crypto Infrastructure
Over the past few years, Mastercard has gradually shifted focus from issuing crypto-linked debit cards to building the core rails that handle on-chain transactions. Earlier this year, the firm unveiled its end-to-end stablecoin payment capabilities, enabling merchant settlements through partners like OKX and Nuvei. It also joined Paxos’s Global Dollar Network, supporting major stablecoins such as USDC, PYUSD, and FIUSD.
Acquiring Zero Hash would instantly give Mastercard access to a complete suite of digital-asset tools—including custody, liquidity, trading, and staking—along with 51 U.S. state money-transmitter licenses and a coveted New York BitLicense. These licenses are among the hardest to obtain, offering Mastercard a fast track to becoming one of the most regulated players in U.S. crypto payments.
Strategic Edge in a Growing Race
The move comes amid rising competition. Visa is testing its own stablecoin-settlement systems, while PayPal and Circle continue to expand their digital payment ecosystems. For Mastercard, the acquisition is not only about innovation but also maintaining relevance as more payments shift away from traditional card rails to direct blockchain settlement.
Zero Hash already powers crypto operations for Interactive Brokers, tastytrade, and other financial institutions—many of which overlap with Mastercard’s merchant and banking partners. Integrating these capabilities could significantly accelerate Mastercard’s entry into tokenized finance.
A Step Toward the Future of Payments
Sources say the transaction would include both cash and stock components, with possible earn-outs for Zero Hash’s leadership team once integrated into Mastercard’s digital units, including Move and the Multi-Token Network.
If completed, the deal would symbolize a turning point for traditional payments. Instead of competing with blockchain settlement systems, Mastercard aims to operate them—ensuring it continues to earn from every transaction, whether it runs on card networks or digital rails.
While stablecoins still represent a fraction of global payment volumes, their speed and low cost make them an attractive alternative. By adding Zero Hash’s technology and regulatory foundation, Mastercard positions itself at the center of the next evolution in global finance—where digital money moves as freely as data on the internet.
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