Circle is expanding into the foreign-exchange market, positioning stablecoins as a tool to modernize one of traditional finance’s most entrenched systems.

The issuer of USDC (USDC) on Thursday unveiled Circle StableFX, an institutional onchain FX platform built on Arc1, the company’s forthcoming layer-1 blockchain, according to a news release shared with Cointelegraph. Circle also introduced Circle Partner Stablecoins, a program designed to support regulated regional stablecoins.

Trading in the global FX market reached $9.6 trillion per day in April, up 28% from 2022, according to data from the Bank of International Settlements (BIS). The daily trading volume in the global FX market is more than double all global stock markets combined, and far exceeds the roughly $1.69 trillion in average daily US equities trading, running 24 hours a day, five days a week, across every major financial center, according to World Bank data shared by Trading Economics.

The new FX engine aims to allow compliant institutions access to stablecoin currency pairs with 24/7 onchain settlement at competitive rates and lower counterparty risk. It also aims to enhance efficiency in FX markets by eliminating the need for multiple counterparties and facilitating faster access to global liquidity.

“With StableFX and Circle Partner Stablecoins, we’re connecting the world’s currencies on Arc,” said Circle chief product and technology officer, Nikhil Chandhok.

Institutions will need to complete comprehensive Know-Your-Business and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) verification to use the “compliance-centric trading environment,” the release said.

Circle StableFX has launched on the Arc Testnet, offering developers and institutions the opportunity to explore the solution. The alpha version is scheduled to roll out for approved developers and institutions alongside the Arc mainnet launch in 2026.

Related: Crypto’s yield gap with TradFi narrows as staking, RWAs surge

Crypto companies target TradFi revenue

Circle’s move into FX marks a growing trend among major crypto companies seeking to reshape traditional markets and claim a share of their revenue.

The move into the FX markets may bring a significant new revenue stream for the issuer of the world’s second-largest stablecoin.

Circle’s revenue surged to $740 million in the third quarter of the year, marking a 66% year-over-year increase. The stablecoin issuer launched its Arc testnet in October, with participation from investment bank Goldman Sachs, asset manager BlackRock, credit card company Visa and over 100 other companies. 

Related: Metaplanet’s Bitcoin gains fall 39% as October crash pressures corporate treasuries

Coinbase, the second-largest crypto exchange by volume, is also exploring TradFi market opportunities through tokenized stocks, prediction markets and by advancing stablecoin adoption via USDC, as part of its “Everything Exchange” vision.

“We laid out our vision of an Everything Exchange last quarter, and made progress in Q3 by increasing the number of tradable spot assets, expanding our derivatives offerings, and continuing to lay the groundwork for additional pillars,” Coinbase said in its Q3 earnings report.

Magazine: Crypto wanted to overthrow banks, now it’s becoming them in stablecoin fight