Why Binance’s reported $2B Mesh investment could decide who controls stablecoin payments

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Binance’s reported move to lead a new Mesh funding round puts a strategic price on the payment routes stablecoins need to leave exchanges, wallets, and trading venues.

A July 2 Axios Pro report said Binance is set to lead a Mesh round valuing the crypto payments company at up to $2 billion. Mesh announced in January that it had closed a $75 million Series C at a $1 billion valuation, so the reported terms would mark a rapid step-up for a company building payment infrastructure rather than another token issuer.

The signal sits in where the reported capital would land. An exchange with users, wallets, liquidity, and merchant payment ambitions would move closer to the layer that determines how stablecoin payments travel from wallets and trading venues to merchants, payment providers, and fiat accounts.

If the round closes on the reported terms, it would point to a new phase in stablecoin competition. The early race centered on issuers, reserves, regulatory status, and market share. The next phase is more operational: who controls the routes that make tokenized dollars spendable off-screen.

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Stablecoins already have scale. CryptoSlate’s stablecoin sector page showed a market cap of about $292 billion and a 24-hour trading volume of $95.6 billion on July 3, 2026. CryptoSlate’s coin rankings showed USDT and USDC together accounting for roughly $257 billion in market cap and about $845 billion in 24-hour trading volume.

Infographic showing Mesh funding timeline, stablecoin liquidity, and the routing path from user wallets and exchange accounts to merchant settlement

That liquidity still has to be converted into a payment flow. A consumer may hold funds at an exchange, in a self-custody wallet, in a fintech app, or on a chain a merchant may prefer to avoid handling directly. A merchant may want local currency, a stablecoin balance, or a back-end settlement route that avoids direct integration with every wallet, chain, and compliance surface.

Why the route is becoming the prize

Mesh is trying to sit in that gap. The company positions itself as a global crypto payments network across payments, deposits, verification, payouts, stablecoin settlement, on- and off-ramps, and wallet or exchange use cases. Its payments product says merchants can use a single integration across 300+ wallets and exchanges, while customers pay from their existing accounts and merchants settle in stablecoins or local currency.

That mechanism explains the Binance signal. Stablecoin adoption depends on whether a payment can start where the user already holds money and end in the format the merchant can use. The issuer remains crucial because reserve quality, redemption access, regulatory treatment, and liquidity still determine whether a payment asset is trusted.

The transaction layer adds a separate source of leverage: which wallets are supported, which exchange account can be used, which chain carries settlement, whether conversion happens before or after checkout, and who keeps the customer relationship.

Mesh-style infrastructure turns those decisions into a product surface. Mesh’s Alliance Program describes an interoperable payments ecosystem across wallets, exchanges, blockchains, stablecoin issuers, and platforms. Its MAP page presents the idea as a partner network rather than a single closed app.

For merchants, that abstraction can reduce the number of crypto integrations they need to support. For wallets and exchanges, it can convert account balances into spendable funds without requiring users to withdraw, bridge, or manually select settlement paths. For stablecoin issuers, it can expand usage, while leaving distribution partly shaped by platforms that sit between the issuer and the payment.

Layer What it connects Strategic role
Mesh 300+ wallets and exchanges, with stablecoin or local-currency merchant settlement Turns fragmented crypto balances into a checkout and settlement route
Binance Pay Exchange users, merchants, and stablecoin-settled B2C payments Shows why an exchange benefits when account balances become payment balances
PayPal Pay with Crypto U.S. merchants, 100 cryptocurrencies, and wallet connections including Coinbase, OKX, Binance, Kraken, Phantom, MetaMask, and Exodus Shows mainstream payment firms can own the merchant-facing experience while crypto payment infrastructure handles wallet-to-merchant routing

The comparison captures the market shift. Stablecoin payments are moving beyond a contest over the largest supply of digital dollars. The competitive edge can go to the platform that moves supply across wallets, exchanges, apps, and merchants with the least friction.

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Binance’s reported interest in Mesh is easier to understand when viewed alongside Binance Pay. In a November blog post, Binance said Binance Pay had over 20 million merchants and that over 98% of Binance Pay B2C payments in 2025 so far were settled in stablecoins.

Those figures make payments a distribution surface. An exchange that already has users, liquidity, wallets, and merchant payment ambitions has a reason to care about infrastructure that connects those balances to outside commerce.

The strategic value goes beyond processing one more transaction. It keeps the user’s starting point within the exchange account while making that balance useful beyond the exchange’s direct merchant relationships. If a routing network can connect exchange balances, wallets, stablecoins, and fiat settlement in one flow, it can extend the exchange’s reach without requiring every merchant to become a crypto infrastructure operator.

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