The collaboration integrates Nium into the Circle Payments Network, an infrastructure stack operated by Circle Technology Services LLC. Through the agreement, financial institutions utilizing the network gain direct access to Nium’s payout rails, which span more than 190 countries and process 100 different currencies.
The move addresses a persistent bottleneck in institutional Web3 infrastructure by linking fast blockchain settlement directly with local banking systems, credit cards, and digital wallets. By joining the ecosystem, Nium enables corporate clients to route transactions through the network into its global distribution architecture via a single api integration.
The joint solution features integrated foreign exchange optimization and smart routing mechanisms to eliminate the need for enterprises to secure separate local payout providers. Circle provides regulated, compliance-mapped USD Coin settlement while Nium manages the real-time currency conversion and final delivery to localized nodes.
The integrated framework aims to reduce the heavy prefunding capital requirements typically required for enterprises executing high- volume treasury management across multiple international corridors.
Executive leadership from both firms noted that the convergence of legacy fiat financial systems and blockchain architecture demands institutional-grade scalability. Nium founder and chief executive officer Prajit Nanu stated that the partnership combines Circle’s regulated settlement asset with Nium’s geographic footprint to streamline global capital mobility.
Circle chief commercial officer Kash Razzaghi highlighted that the integration transitions the digital dollar asset from an isolated settlement instrument into a comprehensive transactional workflow. The commercial expansion arrives as the stablecoin network sees measurable growth in corporate and institutional deployment for cross-border utility.
Circle reported that its payment network captured $8.3 billion in annualized transaction volume, calculated from trailing 30-day transactional velocity measured on March 31, 2026. Nium, which is co-headquartered in San Francisco and Singapore, maintains regulatory licensure in over 40 countries and functions as a principal card issuer for major payment brands.
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