Stablecoins: A New Financial Bridge Connecting Asia and Latin America

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9 hours ago

Author: Maggie Wu, Founder of VelaFi

Trade, investment, and digital cooperation between Asia and Latin America are entering a new phase of accelerated development. From supply chain spillover to Asian companies becoming more actively involved in Latin American infrastructure construction, the economic ties between the two regions are deepening.

This is not just a feeling. According to statistics from the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, the trade volume between China and Latin America reached $518.47 billion in 2024, a year-on-year increase of 6%; in the first half of 2025 alone, the bilateral trade volume between China and Latin America reached $254.44 billion. These figures reveal that both sides are building a cross-regional trade corridor that extends beyond goods and logistics to the cross-border flow of digital value.

At the same time, Latin America's thriving fintech ecosystem is intersecting with Asia's highly developed digital payment infrastructure, providing fertile ground for innovation in cross-border finance. This cross-border integration is nurturing a brand new economic corridor that has the foundation for modernization on one hand, yet is still constrained by lagging financial infrastructure on the other. Nevertheless, it remains one of the most promising economic corridors in the past decade.

In this context, the rapidly proliferating stablecoins are increasingly becoming a powerful catalyst. Stablecoins were once just a novel concept, but they are now reshaping the logic of value flow between countries and individuals. The original intention behind the design of stablecoins was to combine the stability of fiat currency with the flexibility of blockchain technology; today, they are quietly changing the ways people save, consume, and transfer money. Whether for cross-border remittances, trade settlements, e-commerce payments, or preserving value in high-inflation economies, stablecoins are beginning to play a role. They are no longer just exclusive tools for the "crypto circle," but belong to anyone seeking simpler, faster, and more inclusive financial services.

I have long traveled between China and the United States and maintained close cooperation with the Latin American market, witnessing firsthand how this transformation has shifted from merely improving efficiency to deeper trust-building and systemic interconnectivity, reconstructing the way value flows between the two regions and truly unleashing the potential for growth between them.

For decades, Asia and Latin America have been progressing in relatively independent and parallel systems. Different regulatory environments, infrastructures, and payment cultures have made it difficult for capital to flow efficiently between the two regions. Traditional cross-border transfers often require multiple intermediaries, causing users to bear high transaction costs and exchange rate losses, as well as endure lengthy settlement periods. Among those most affected are small and medium-sized exporters, digital service providers, and families reliant on cross-border remittances. Today, stablecoins are dismantling many of these barriers. By establishing more direct payment channels and reducing friction, they are gradually aligning the operational rhythms of the digital economies in both regions.

In Asia, the digital payment ecosystem represented by WeChat Pay and Alipay has matured early, upgrading mobile wallets to become foundational financial infrastructure that permeates daily life. Meanwhile, in Latin America, payment systems led by public institutions, such as Pix (Brazil) and SPEI (Mexico), have driven the comprehensive digitization of domestic transactions and opened the door for further development of interconnected blockchain financial models.

The next frontier opportunity lies in connecting these local networks through stablecoins. With this tool, both businesses and individuals have the chance to complete value transfers from Buenos Aires to Shanghai or from Mexico City to Singapore in just seconds.

In Latin America, the momentum for the adoption of stablecoins is particularly strong. Economic volatility, currency devaluation, and high cross-border remittance costs have naturally made stablecoins an alternative option for businesses and individuals. Startups use them to optimize cash management; export companies use them to receive overseas payments without the constraints of lengthy settlements; ordinary families view them as a value storage tool to hedge against inflation. Unlike Asia's path of digital financial development driven by super apps, this force in Latin America comes more from bottom-up initiatives, driven by real survival pressures, internal community trust, and a continuous pursuit of financial stability. Regulatory agencies are also adapting, allowing for pilot projects and innovations within a more flexible framework while maintaining systemic safety.

The uniqueness of this moment lies not only in the technology itself but also in the cultural and strategic bridges that are gradually forming between the two regions. From fintech executives to freelancers, professionals active in both markets are transforming the experiences accumulated in Asia's highly digital environment into concrete practices and localized innovations on Latin America's emerging fintech infrastructure. This cross-regional exchange is accelerating innovation in programmable payments, supply chain settlements, and cross-border payroll disbursements. As trade between Asia and Latin America continues to expand, stablecoins are gradually becoming the link in this new financial corridor.

Simultaneously, in-depth discussions are taking place at the regulatory level. Within various jurisdictions, stablecoins are transitioning from unregulated experimental entities to recognized components of financial infrastructure. The MiCA framework in Europe and the GENIUS Act in the United States provide important references for the world. Asia and Latin America are also exploring their respective regulatory blueprints and striving to find a balance between innovation and prudent regulation. This more collaborative approach lays the groundwork for future fintech companies, banks, and payment institutions to jointly build real-time digital payment networks under compliance.

The timing is also just right. In 2024, the global cross-border payment market size is nearing $200 trillion; it is expected to continue growing at an annual rate of about 5% until 2027. Connecting Asia and Latin America more closely through stablecoin-related infrastructure will help both regions share this incremental growth while modernizing the ways in which cross-border value flows.

Ultimately, the core of stablecoins is not speculation but connection. Digital currencies can indeed become a new "diplomatic tool," rebuilding trust and enhancing efficiency between previously isolated markets, while bringing more people into the financial system. This new corridor supported by stablecoins between Asia and Latin America is a microcosm of this change. Geography is no longer a boundary that limits opportunities; the cross-border flow of value will be as smooth as information transmission.

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