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Circle Payments Network Launches for Banks
Circle launched CPN Managed Payments on April 8, a fully managed stablecoin settlement solution that makes the Circle Payments Network accessible to banks, payment service providers, and fintechs without requiring them to manage digital assets, custody infrastructure, or blockchain operations directly.
Summary
Circle Payments Network’s new CPN Managed Payments offering solves the adoption problem that has kept most financial institutions on the sidelines of stablecoin settlement. Banks want faster, cheaper cross-border payments. They do not want to apply for crypto licenses, build custody systems, manage USDC wallets, or navigate compliance frameworks they do not yet have. CPN Managed Payments takes all of that off their plate.
“With CPN Managed Payments, we’re simplifying how institutions adopt and scale stablecoin payments,” said Nikhil Chandhok, Circle’s chief product and technology officer. “By combining issuance, liquidity, compliance, and programmable infrastructure into a unified solution, we are enabling financial institutions to embed stablecoin settlement into their existing payment stacks with enterprise-grade reliability and operational readiness.”
How the Product Works
A payment service provider or fintech connects to the Circle Payments Network through a single integration. From that point, it sends and receives in fiat. Circle converts on the backend: minting USDC on the sending side, routing it across the blockchain, and burning it on the receiving side, with the beneficiary institution receiving local currency. The entire digital asset lifecycle, including compliance checks, chain routing, and liquidity management, runs inside Circle’s infrastructure.
The platform is composable by design. Institutions can begin with the fully managed model and gradually take on more direct ownership of USDC wallets and settlement infrastructure as their internal capabilities develop. The product is licensed through Circle Internet Financial, LLC, a registered Money Transmitter and BitLicense holder in New York. Circle holds money transmission licenses in 46 US states along with electronic money institution authorizations in Europe and Singapore.
Why the Timing Matters
The launch landed alongside White House and congressional activity on stablecoin regulation. The GENIUS Act and ongoing CLARITY Act discussions have both addressed how stablecoin yield and reserve backing should be structured, with CPN’s launch providing regulators with a functioning institutional settlement product as a reference point for what compliant stablecoin infrastructure actually looks like in practice.
Circle has positioned USDC explicitly as a compliance-first stablecoin, distinguishing it from offshore issuers like Tether. That positioning is central to its institutional pitch: banks and payment companies operating inside regulatory frameworks need a counterparty that shares the same operating environment. Thunes deputy CEO Chloé Mayenobe said the partnership allows the company to “seamlessly bridge traditional banks, mobile wallets, and digital assets,” creating what she described as “interoperability at scale.”
What It Means for the US Stablecoin Market
CPN Managed Payments arriving alongside Payward’s move to lock up US crypto USDC settlement infrastructure signals a structural consolidation of institutional-grade crypto payment and settlement rails in the United States under regulatory-compliant entities ahead of the legislative frameworks that will define the sector. The combination of Circle’s payment network, Payward’s derivatives clearing stack, and the CFTC’s expanding mandate creates the regulated infrastructure layer the US institutional market has been building toward since the first spot Bitcoin ETFs launched in 2024.