BVNK is being acquired by legacy payments firm Mastercard for $1.8 billion.
BVNK is a stablecoin Fintech that has grown to process payment volumes in the billions. It holds multiple licenses around the world, including a money transmitter approval in the US, an EMI in the UK, a VASP license in the EU, among others.
In a blog post, founder and CEO Jesse Hemson-Struthers explained the reason for the sale, noting that the acquisition will enable them to scale their services, moving from a payments firm to a “full stack financial infrastructure” platform that supports instant transfers of value.
“… despite our growth, we’ve only scratched the surface of what’s possible,” said Hemson-Struthers.
He declared that Mastercard is in “profound alignment of their vision o the future while bringoing a global payments network to the table.
Hemson-Struthers said they intend to create a foundation to support entirely new business models with synergies that unlock billions in “incremental revenue” as stablecoins become the base layer for how money moves around the world.
Existing customers will gain access to additional Mastercard-provided services.
Melvis Langyintuo, Executive Director of the Canton Foundation, commented on the acquisition, positing that the deal exposes deep structural tension.
“The harder problem is what happens next when that same digital money needs to interact with collateral, securities and financing workflows. If those layers are not interoperable, liquidity doesn’t compound; instead, it fragments across parallel systems. The industry still treats interoperability as a downstream integration challenge. In practice, it is upstream market design. You are aligning how different assets move and behave, how transactions are sequenced and critically, who has visibility into each step. That cannot be solved bilaterally or retrofitted through APIs. It requires shared rules from the outset,” said Langyintuo.
He says the difference is between incremental gains and a “step change in how global markets function.”
Langyintuo makes a solid point that should not be lost on Mastercard, but there is also the aspect of Mastercard maintaining relevance by providing more than legacy payment rails. From this perspective, the purchase of BVNK makes a lot of sense.
Creative destruction and adaptation to the future are difficult, especially for well-established firms with entrenched cultures that can impede the adoption of services that drive long-run value for the firm. Meanwhile, competition is growing from more agile, native digital asset firms and others keen to offer services likely to usurp legacy payment operations.