During a recent discussion on Hacker News, Patrick Collison, CEO of Stripe, expressed optimism about the rising adoption of stablecoins, emphasizing their advantages over traditional payment systems. This conversation followed the unveiling of Tempo, a blockchain platform specifically designed for stablecoin transactions, jointly developed by Stripe and Paradigm.
Collison shared that Stripe had previously been disheartened by the limited utility of cryptocurrency in payment processing over the last decade. However, he noted a significant shift in perspective as more businesses have started leveraging stablecoins for everyday financial operations. He highlighted Stripe’s acquisition of Bridge, a stablecoin infrastructure provider, in October 2024, illustrating its practical applications. For instance, SpaceX utilizes Bridge for managing financial flows in challenging markets, while the Latin American fintech firm DolarApp depends on it for banking services. Additionally, an Argentinian bike importer employs Stripe’s dashboard for supplier payments.
In his comments, Collison clarified that these businesses are not drawn to cryptocurrency for its speculative nature but rather because stablecoins offer a more efficient, speedier, and cost-effective alternative to existing solutions. He described the intention behind Tempo as providing a seamless backend infrastructure, akin to traditional financial messaging systems like SWIFT or ACH. According to Collison, while consumers might not directly interact with Tempo, they would reap the benefits of its underlying efficiency.
When asked about the specific allure of stablecoins for businesses, Collison outlined several key factors. These included near-instant settlement capabilities that minimize liquidity issues, lower transaction costs compared to credit card payments, enhanced reliability in cross-border transfers, streamlined currency conversions, and direct on-chain access to U.S. dollars.
Furthermore, he addressed misconceptions regarding the motivations behind the adoption of stablecoins, refuting the notion that it primarily stems from regulatory circumvention. Collison pointed out that stablecoins are now explicitly regulated in jurisdictions such as the United States under the GENIUS Act and in Europe under the MiCA framework. He argued that the true appeal lies in their ability to alleviate the complexities associated with high-volume money movement.
The Tempo blockchain is described as a “payments-first” infrastructure crafted specifically for stablecoins, merging Stripe’s global payment expertise with Paradigm’s crypto knowledge. Its design focuses on predictable low fees, optional privacy, and the capability to pay both transaction and gas fees with any stablecoin. The platform boasts a dedicated payments lane with features like memos and access lists, and is compatible with Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM), utilizing the Reth client.
With a processing capacity aimed at handling over 100,000 transactions per second and achieving sub-second finality, Tempo is strategically positioned to support a diverse range of financial applications—including global payouts, payroll processing, remittances, tokenized deposits, embedded financial accounts, microtransactions, and what the companies term “agentic payments.”
In terms of governance, Stripe and Paradigm have emphasized Tempo’s commitment to operating as a neutral platform for stablecoins. It will be secured by an independent and diverse set of validators, with an aspiration toward achieving fully permissionless validation.
The project has already launched with a varied set of design partners, including major financial institutions and tech companies such as Visa, Standard Chartered, Deutsche Bank, Nubank, Revolut, Shopify, OpenAI, Anthropic, Coupang, DoorDash, Lead Bank, and Mercury, signaling broad industry interest and support for its innovative approach to stablecoin payments.