At the Stablecoin Conference, held in Mexico City on August 27–28, the opening session grounded two very real pain points in cross-border payments: trust and the total cost of moving money across fiat and crypto rails. The panel summed it up like this: “Trust is hard to build with international payments because every step is fraught with delays.” That tension between user expectations and operational friction was the thread running through the panel.
The conversation—led by Daniel Vogel (CEO and co-founder of Bitso), Matthew Oppenheimer (CEO and co-founder of Remitly), and Zach Abrams (CEO and co-founder of Bridge)—put numbers and an execution lens on that challenge.
Oppenheimer stressed that 24/7 disbursement is costly and that the greatest efficiency gains lie in the “third bucket”: treasury, FX, and cash management. He also shared scale metrics—sub-1-hour delivery in ~93% of transactions, coverage in ~170 countries, and a potential reach of ~5 billion bank accounts and wallets—that explain why optimizing the liquidity layer is already a priority. Abrams, for his part, emphasized orchestration: making stablecoin balances useful by moving USDC → fiat and connecting crypto rails with payout networks (bank accounts, wallets, cash) in a predictable, compliant way.
Vogel framed adoption around the triad technology + product-market fit + regulation, arguing that crypto infrastructure doesn’t replace banking—it complements it—accelerating cross-border payments when connected to 24/7 local rails like SPEI/PIX. That’s where Bitso adds value: on/off-ramps, liquidity, and local compliance in a unified API that reduces prefunding and simplifies reconciliation without rebuilding the stack.Stablecoin adoption isn’t “crypto for crypto’s sake,” but about solving concrete pains: trust, cost, and usability. Trust erodes with delays; operating 24/7 raises disbursement costs; and the third bucket (treasury, FX, cash management) concentrates the biggest savings opportunity. While legacy rails lag, the ecosystem is moving forward by combining stablecoins with 24/7 local rails (SPEI/PIX) and partners that already bridge both worlds.
In cross-border payments, trust remains the quiet variable—every delay erodes it—hence the value of sub-1-hour settlement for ~93% of transactions. The scale is already there—networks reaching ~5 billion accounts and wallets across ~170 countries; the real challenge now is orchestrating local rails and meeting each market’s regulatory requirements. In that context, Bitso acts as the operational bridge: a single API with direct SPEI/PIX, integrated FX, and local licenses in Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, and Argentina—reducing prefunding, simplifying reconciliation, and accelerating time-to-cash. In short, crypto-to-cash is no longer a promise: it’s production-ready.
*NVIO Mexico enables direct access to SPEI and provides payment services in full compliance with Mexican regulations. NVIO Pagos México, S.A.P.I. de C.V., IFPE (“NVIO Mexico”), is an entity authorized and regulated by Mexico’s National Banking and Securities Commission (CNBV). Learn more at nvio.mx/terms.