The payments giant Visa (NYSE: V) announced Wednesday that it will help financial institutions migrate payment flows onchain while maintaining the strict privacy standards required by regulated entities. Visa now stands as one of 40 Super Validators on the network, a role specifically reserved for institutions tasked with stewarding the network’s core infrastructure.
The move addresses a longstanding barrier to entry for legacy banks: the inherent transparency of public blockchains. While transparency is often cited as a benefit of distributed ledger technology, it remains a “dealbreaker” for banks that cannot legally expose sensitive transaction data or payroll details to the public.
Canton Network utilizes a configurable privacy model, allowing organizations to utilize shared infrastructure without leaking confidential information. This architecture permits banks to execute settlement and treasury operations without the risk of exposing proprietary trading positions or margin movements.
Rubail Birwadker, Visa’s Global Head of Growth Products and Strategic Partnerships, emphasized that the firm is bringing “Visa-grade trust, governance, and operational rigor” to the platform. This allows regulated firms to experiment with stablecoin payments without overhauling their existing risk and compliance frameworks.
To date, the Canton Network has seen significant adoption across capital markets for the issuance and trading of tokenized assets. With Visa’s entry, the ecosystem aims to connect those capital market activities directly with onchain payment and settlement layers.
Eric Saraniecki, Head of Network Strategy for Digital Asset and co-creator of Canton, noted that Visa’s participation signals the technology has matured into “production-ready infrastructure.” He suggests this marks a new phase where transactions move with blockchain speed while staying secure.
The partnership is a natural extension of Visa’s broader digital asset roadmap. The company’s stablecoin settlement operations have already reached an annualized run rate of $4.6 billion globally, reflecting a growing appetite for blockchain-based liquidity.
Furthermore, Visa currently supports more than 130 stablecoin-linked card programs across 50 countries. The firm’s specialized Stablecoins Advisory Practice within Visa Consulting & Analytics (VCA) will now guide clients on how to align Canton Network participation with their broader corporate objectives.
As a Super Validator, Visa possesses voting power to shape critical decisions regarding the network’s future and its underlying payment infrastructure. This positioning allows Visa to influence how institutional-grade governance is applied to decentralized networks.
Visa remains “chain-agnostic,” focusing on networks that prioritize a payments-first, institutional approach. By spanning both the governance and payment layers on Canton, Visa offers a familiar bridge for banks wary of the “wild west” nature of many public chains.
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