Gate 廣場|3/4 今日話題: #美伊局势影响
🎁 化身廣場“戰地觀察員”,抽 5 位幸運兒送出 $2,500 仓位體驗券!
美伊衝突持續升級,霍爾木茲海峽陷入事實性封鎖,伊拉克部分原油生產受影響。能源供應再度緊張,通脹預期抬頭,股市與大宗商品市場波動加劇。
💬 本期熱議:
1️⃣ 你關注到了哪些足以撼動市場的戰爭新進展?
2️⃣ 能源、航運、國防補給、避險資產(黃金/BTC)都受到了哪些影響?
3️⃣ 當前有哪些值得關注的多空機會?
分享觀點,瓜分好禮 👉️ https://www.gate.com/post
布局 Gate TradFi 👉️ https://www.gate.com/tradfi
📅 3/4 15:00 - 3/6 12:00 (UTC+8)
Visa Now Settles Stablecoin on Ethereum — And the Numbers Are Already in the Billions - Crypto Economy
TL;DR
Visa no longer runs stablecoin settlement as a pilot program. The company moved the operation to production scale, integrating Ethereum as a live settlement rail that allows issuers and acquirers to close obligations directly in USDC, bypassing traditional bank transfers entirely. The system runs around the clock. Settlement times that once took days now close in minutes. Cardholders notice nothing — they still swipe a Visa card just as before.
By early 2026, Visa’s stablecoin settlement program processed more than $3.5 billion in annualized volume across multiple blockchains, with Ethereum serving as the primary layer for high-value flows. Lead Bank and Cross River Bank are among the first U.S. institutions to settle with Visa in USDC over public blockchains.
The architecture distributes volume across Ethereum, Solana, and Avalanche depending on speed and security requirements, with Stellar handling select cross-border cases. Ethereum anchors the entire structure because of its deep liquidity and decentralization.
The total annualized run-rate reached approximately $4.5 billion by early 2026. Against Visa’s $14.2 trillion in total annual payment volume, the share is still small. Against Ethereum’s on-chain stablecoin flows, the incremental gas demand registers as modest. Fee burn from Visa-related transactions alone does not move the needle in any immediate way. DeFi activity, Layer 2 transactions, and speculative trading all generate more gas pressure per dollar.
What Visa’s Entry Actually Does to Ethereum’s Position
The real weight of the announcement sits in the narrative layer, not in the fee data. Ethereum now functions as a back-end settlement rail for a systemically important payment network.
That framing tends to carry more weight during risk-on periods, when institutions need justification to raise allocations. A rail that processes Visa settlements carries different connotations than a rail that only handles DeFi protocols. The distinction compresses perceived risk over time, even when on-chain fee impact stays low in the near term.
Stablecoin market cap now exceeds $250 billion, and Visa’s program represents a slice of a much larger institutional shift toward settling real-economy flows in on-chain dollars. More card transactions and cross-border payments settled in USDC deepen the dollar liquidity available on Ethereum, which makes the chain a more attractive venue for foreign exchange, money-market instruments, and tokenized assets.

Visa and Circle also explore Arc, Circle’s new Layer-1 chain, as an additional settlement venue. Visa participates as a validator. Some volume could shift there over time. Even so, Ethereum retains the anchor role for high-trust, security-sensitive flows. The likely end state distributes volume by function — Ethereum for settlement integrity, faster chains for throughput.
Over the next six to twelve months, the Visa news stream — new banks, new regions, new product integrations — builds the case for ETH more through institutional confidence than through cash-flow mechanics.
For anyone tracking macro dips in ETH, the Visa integration places a quiet but firm floor under the argument that Ethereum is losing relevance to competitors. The floor does not guarantee price appreciation. It does make the bear case harder to hold.