Fintech Industry Professional Shares Insights on Polgyon Labs’ Move into Stablecoins

Polygon Labs’ recent move into stablecoins has been viewed positively by Fintech industry professionals. Artur Firstov, Chief Business Officer at Mercuryo, a payment infrastructure platform in the digital token space, has shared key insights with CI on this latest development.

Artur Firstov of Mercuryo stated:

“Polygon Labs’ reported move to set up a dedicated stablecoin payments arm is the clearest signal yet that 2026 is the year of payment infrastructure, amid a challenging crypto market. For years, stablecoins functioned primarily as a trading tool and safe harbor. Now, we see a major player in the space apparently aiming to raise up to $100 million for a venture that would be at the forefront of global commercial settlement.

In addition to Polygon Labs, many TradFi players including Mastercard and Visa have made significant announcements to prepare for a world where stablecoins run side by side with other more conventional payment rails. In their early days, stablecoins were used mainly to enter and exit crypto market trading positions. But their use-cases have evolved into remittances and other areas of finance as evidenced in 2025 and so far in 2026.

Firstov added:

“What’s notable here is the shift toward a dedicated business model for payments. Companies that are succeeding in this business are developing the infrastructure and compliance layers that feed directly into payment rails. It is also important to view this move by Polygon Labs in the context of increasing numbers of participants in the crypto space pivoting into Fintech.”

However, it should be noted here that crypto is simply another part of Fintech itself. Any innovation that aims to improve upon the existing financial system can be considered a type of Fintech breakthrough.

Firstov also shared:

“When a major player such as Polygon Labs prioritizes a payments-first entity, it validates that the next wave of growth will come from making blockchain-based money movement feel identical to a standard API-driven fintech experience.”

This is actually a pertinent point, because the end-user need not concern themselves with the back-end implementation details. They need to only focus on using the actual products and benefitting from them in some tangible way.

Firstov concluded:

“The ultimate win for this sector isn’t when everyone has a crypto wallet, it’s when everyone has a global account that runs on blockchain rails without them ever needing to know it.”

Indeed, the implementation details are the last thing the end-user should be concerned about. Whether any solution leverages or does not use blockchain should be irrelevant. What really matters is if these innovations can meaningfully enhance user experience.



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