The Settlement Problem That Won’t Go Away and How Blockchain Is Rewiring Global Commerce

Amidst this backdrop, a parallel evolution in the form of stablecoins has been gaining steam, moving more capital than Visa and Mastercard combined last year (roughly USD 27.6 trillion).

By Terrence Hu | Nov 11, 2025
File

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur Asia Pacific, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

The financial infrastructure powering international trade hasn’t changed in decades, with popular instruments like letters of credit still having to crawl through correspondent banking networks, eating up days or sometimes even weeks to clear.

Amidst this backdrop, a parallel evolution in the form of stablecoins has been gaining steam, moving more capital than Visa and Mastercard combined last year (roughly USD 27.6 trillion).

Yet this growth has been confined primarily to the realm of DeFi or centralized exchanges, not in the trad-fi corridors where cross-border payment friction remains most acute. And, while the infrastructure exists for near-instantaneous settlement, connecting it to real-world trade documentation has proven technically and legally complex.

That said, recent regulatory developments have begun to change the equation, with the UK’s Electronic Trade Documents Act, for instance, giving digital bills of lading the same legal standing as their paper counterparts (akin to frameworks like Singapore’s TradeTrust and the UAE’s blockchain-based trade finance registry).

In fact, experts believe that as and when this transition continues to gain more traction, businesses across the globe will finally be able to embrace electronic processes without fearing jurisdictional disputes.

Building rails where documentation meets settlement

While existing trade platforms have been digitizing letters of credit and other similar offerings for years, they’ve lacked native blockchain settlement infrastructure and access to regulated digital currencies that banks can actually use.

XDC Ventures’ acquisition of Contour Network represents a step in this direction, offering a consortium of banking giants such as HSBC, Standard Chartered, BNP Paribas, and Citi (amongst others) with battle-tested infrastructure for frictionless cross-border trading.

Operational since 2019, XDC’s Layer-1 framework is EVM-compatible and ready for institutional use cases, so much so that Circle recently deployed its popular USDC stablecoin on the platform, allowing financial institutions to use it for settlements without regulatory uncertainty.

Moreover, XDC has also launched its ‘Stable-Coin Lab’ initiative to help foster pilots with banks and corporates around regulated stablecoin issuance and settlement. On the development, company co-founder, Ritesh Kakkad, opined:

“Banks need settlement rails, treasury optimization, and compliance frameworks. We’re building all three. We see Contour not only as a trade-finance network but as an enabler of compliant stable-coin use-cases that can deliver new efficiencies and revenue streams for banks and corporates.”

To put things into context, for a USD 1 million transaction, eliminating traditional foreign exchange fees of 1-3 per cent alone could save users anywhere between USD 10,000 – 30,000, before accounting for reduced processing costs and faster working capital turnover.

What institutional infrastructure really requires today

From the outside looking in, the broader transformation happening in trade finance isn’t just about converting existing assets to electronic ones but about fundamentally rearchitecting how value can move across borders when goods change hands. If the pilot delivers on reducing settlement times from days to hours (while cutting costs by 30-50 per cent), it could very well forge the perfect path for scaling institutional stablecoin adoption beyond crypto markets into the USD 9 trillion annual global trade finance industry.

Put even more simply, it could mean the creation of a real bridge between TradFi and Web3, not in some abstract way, but in the way the mechanics of, say, a cargo ship can get paid and manufacturers can manage working capital across continents. In any case, interesting times ahead!

The financial infrastructure powering international trade hasn’t changed in decades, with popular instruments like letters of credit still having to crawl through correspondent banking networks, eating up days or sometimes even weeks to clear.

Amidst this backdrop, a parallel evolution in the form of stablecoins has been gaining steam, moving more capital than Visa and Mastercard combined last year (roughly USD 27.6 trillion).

Yet this growth has been confined primarily to the realm of DeFi or centralized exchanges, not in the trad-fi corridors where cross-border payment friction remains most acute. And, while the infrastructure exists for near-instantaneous settlement, connecting it to real-world trade documentation has proven technically and legally complex.

Terrence Hu is a writer with 5 years of experience spanning across business, culture, and technology. With a background in journalism, Terrence brings a unique voice and perspective to his work.

Related Content

Business News

Visa Cardholders in Asia Pacific Access Year-Round Global Messaging with Travelgoogoo eSIM

Singapore, 6 February 2026 — Visa cardholders across 23 Asia Pacific countries can now access global messaging through the Travelgoogoo eSIM Travel Club. The partnership between Visa and Travelgoogoo provides 365-day unlimited messaging across 123 countries and members-only rates for high-speed data via a single eSIM. Travelgoogoo has expanded collaborations with financial institutions to extend […]
Business News

Acronis Names Insightz Technology as First MSSP Partner in Singapore

Acronis today announced that Insightz Technology has been appointed as its first certified Managed Security Service Provider (MSSP) partner in Singapore. Under the partnership, Insightz Technology will deliver Managed Detection and Response (MDR) services to managed service providers (MSPs) and their customers using Acronis technology. Insightz Technology was selected based on its experience providing managed […]
Business News

VCI Global Disposes Credilab via Management Buyout Valued at US$43.74 Million; Retains 30% Stake

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, Feb. 4, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — VCI Global Limited (NASDAQ: VCIG) (“VCI Global” or the “Company”) today announced that it has entered into an agreement to dispose of its fintech subsidiary, Credilab Sdn Bhd (“Credilab”), through a management buyout at an enterprise valuation of approximately US$43.74 million, representing 1.1× net tangible assets […]
Business News

HKMA Launches Initiatives to Support AI and Distributed Ledger Technologies

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) has released a blueprint outlining new initiatives to support the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) and distributed ledger technologies (DLT) in the financial sector, enabled by high-performance computing infrastructure. The blueprint forms part of HKMA’s Fintech 2030 strategy and focuses on advancing more complex technology use cases within financial […]
Business News

UBS Marks Handover of New Hong Kong Headquarters

Hong Kong — UBS has completed the handover of its new Hong Kong headquarters at the International Gateway Centre in West Kowloon. The 14-storey building will serve as UBS’s Hong Kong headquarters and is expected to consolidate employees currently working across five locations, including Two IFC and One Peking Road, by the fourth quarter of […]
Business News

Hong Kong IPO Market Records Second-Strongest January on Record

Hong Kong’s initial public offering (IPO) market has kicked off 2026 with exceptional momentum, recording its second-strongest January on record in terms of funds raised, according to market data. In January 2026, 12 companies listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, raising a combined US$4.2 billion, based on data from the London Stock Exchange Group […]