Most people have never heard of Nium. But there's a good chance money has moved through its infrastructure.
The Singapore-based payments company powers cross-border payouts, card programs, and treasury services for banks, fintechs, and enterprises around the world. Operating across more than 190 countries and holding over 40 regulatory licenses globally, Nium has quietly become one of the largest payment networks most consumers never see.
Now it's bringing stablecoins into that network.
Circle has partnered with Nium to integrate USDC settlement into its global payout infrastructure, allowing businesses to move funds using stablecoins while settling payments in more than 100 local currencies.
For Circle, it's another step toward making USDC a global settlement layer. For Nium, it provides customers with direct access to stablecoin liquidity without requiring them to build their own crypto infrastructure.
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Solving a Multi-Billion Dollar Problem
One of the biggest inefficiencies in international payments is prefunding.
Businesses operating globally often need to keep capital parked across multiple countries and banking systems to ensure payments can be processed quickly.