STABLE
ETH
PAT
SEC
2026
Ripple and Convera have unveiled a stablecoin-based cross-border payments partnership aimed at pushing crypto rails deeper into business treasury workflows without forcing customers to touch crypto directly. The pitch is simple: keep companies in fiat at both ends, use stablecoins in the middle, and turn blockchain settlement into back-end plumbing instead of a front-end leap of faith.
On March 31, 2026, Convera said it had entered a strategic collaboration with Ripple to deliver crypto-enabled payment and treasury tools for businesses later in 2026. The announcement did not identify launch corridors, commercial terms, or named end customers.
Convera said it will orchestrate the end-to-end payment experience while Ripple provides liquidity, on and off-ramping, and cross-border settlement infrastructure. That makes this a payments-stack story, not a splashy token listing or consumer wallet launch.
Patrick Gauthier framed the partnership as a way to meet enterprise demand without asking finance teams to rebuild how they already move money across borders.
“We knew we needed a trusted, visionary partner that can help us meet our customers where they are in their journey. Ripple is a clear leader in the crypto space and a natural fit for Convera.”
Patrick Gauthier, via Convera’s announcement
The deal also fits a wider shift in crypto infrastructure coverage, where the focus has moved from speculative narratives toward utility and compliance, including how XRP sits inside the latest SEC non-securities guidance.
BusinessWire said the companies are using a “stablecoin sandwich”, with payments beginning in fiat, settling through regulated stablecoins, and ending in fiat again. That structure matters because it keeps the crypto element buried in the rails rather than turning treasury teams into direct crypto operators.
Convera’s commercial payments network spans more than 140 currencies across 200 countries and territories, giving Ripple access to an enterprise footprint that already reaches deep into global payment flows.
140+ currencies across 200 countries and territories
Aaron Slettehaugh said the collaboration is meant to give businesses more control over how and when value moves across borders. That quote underlines the operational pitch at the center of the deal rather than any promise of consumer-facing crypto adoption.
“By partnering with Convera, we’re combining a trusted global payment infrastructure with stablecoin-powered settlement to give businesses more control over how and when they move value across borders.”
Aaron Slettehaugh, via BusinessWire
What the companies did not say is just as important. Neither announcement named the specific stablecoin being used for settlement, so pinning the story to RLUSD would go beyond the disclosed facts.
That caution lines up with a broader enterprise pattern: traditional finance keeps experimenting with crypto-linked structures while trying to mute the volatility story, whether through behind-the-scenes payment rails or proposals like New Hampshire’s reported $100M Bitcoin-backed bond plan.
Ripple said on March 3, 2026 that Ripple Payments is live across more than 60 major markets and has processed more than $100 billion. Those numbers give the Convera partnership more weight than a fresh pilot with untested rails.
$100B+ processed across 60+ major markets
Ripple also says it operates with more than 75 global licenses and money transmitter licenses, including a New York trust company charter. That compliance footprint helps explain why Convera chose a partner with regulated-market muscle instead of building its own crypto settlement stack from scratch.
Put Convera’s network coverage next to Ripple Payments’ transaction scale, and the strategic read becomes clearer: Ripple is trying to make stablecoins feel less like a crypto product and more like enterprise infrastructure. That same race for invisible, scalable rails is why debates over designs such as Vitalik Buterin’s lean Ethereum vision now matter beyond Ethereum diehards.
The announcement is still narrower than the hype cycle suggests. The rollout is described as coming in 2026, but the companies have not disclosed customers, corridors, pricing, or settlement asset details, which means the strongest confirmed takeaway is the partnership model itself, not an immediate global rollout.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
The article Ripple Partners With Convera for Stablecoin Cross-Border Payments first featured on theccpress.com.