Mastercard agreed on March 17, 2026 to acquire stablecoin infrastructure company BVNK for up to $1.8 billion, the clearest sign yet that the card networks crypto once vowed to replace are now buying their way into blockchain payments.
The deal, which includes $300 million in contingent payments, is designed to connect on-chain payments with traditional fiat rails. Mastercard said BVNK operates across major blockchain networks in more than 130 countries and that the acquisition will expand its support for stablecoins, tokenized deposits, and tokenized assets.
BVNK co-founder Jesse Hemson-Struthers said the company has “only scratched the surface of what’s possible.” The transaction remains subject to regulatory review, with closing anticipated before the end of 2026.
Crypto’s anti-middleman thesis met the middlemen
The original pitch for cryptocurrency payments was straightforward: peer-to-peer transfers that cut out card networks, their processing fees, and multi-day settlement windows. Stablecoins extended that logic by offering dollar-denominated value that could move on-chain without touching a bank or a card rail.
Visa and Mastercard were the clearest symbols of the incumbent model crypto aimed to displace. Every swipe fee and chargeback delay reinforced the argument that blockchain-native payments could do the same job faster and cheaper.
That narrative assumed card networks would resist blockchain adoption. Instead, both companies moved to absorb the technology. The BVNK acquisition shows Mastercard sees more value in owning connective infrastructure between fiat and crypto than in defending a purely traditional model.
Why buying beats partnering for card networks
Visa laid groundwork before Mastercard’s acquisition. In May 2025, Visa Ventures made a strategic investment in BVNK. Rubail Birwadker, who leads Visa’s crypto initiatives, said at the time that “stablecoins are fast becoming a part of global payment flows.”
By January 2026, that relationship had deepened. BVNK began powering stablecoin payments for Visa Direct, which BVNK described as Visa’s $1.7 trillion real-time payments network. Visa separately reported more than $3.5 billion in annualized stablecoin settlement volume after launching USDC settlement in the United States in December 2025.
Mastercard’s move from partnership to outright acquisition signals a different calculation. Owning a company like BVNK gives Mastercard direct control over the bridge between on-chain and fiat systems, rather than depending on a third party that a competitor could acquire or replicate. As regulatory frameworks for crypto continue to take shape, controlling infrastructure also positions card networks to meet compliance requirements on their own terms.
Axios independently confirmed the deal and noted that Visa Ventures was already among BVNK’s investors, meaning Mastercard is effectively acquiring a company its chief rival helped fund.
Integration, co-option, or normalization?
The tension is clear. Crypto builders spent years arguing that decentralized rails would make card networks obsolete. Now the two largest card networks are embedding blockchain infrastructure into their own systems, with Mastercard writing a check worth up to $1.8 billion to do it.
For blockchain infrastructure startups, the Mastercard-BVNK deal may be a validation event. Companies that build connective layers between on-chain and traditional finance now have a concrete exit benchmark. For users, the practical effect is that stablecoin payments may reach mainstream distribution faster through existing card networks than through standalone crypto wallets.
The broader pattern matters for how crypto markets interact with traditional finance. Visa’s approach so far has been to invest and integrate through pilots, while Mastercard chose outright acquisition. Both strategies point in the same direction: card networks that once ignored blockchain are now competing to control its payment infrastructure.
Whether this represents crypto winning by infiltrating legacy finance or legacy finance winning by absorbing crypto depends on perspective. What the evidence shows is convergence. The companies that crypto-native payment projects set out to replace are now the ones writing the largest checks for blockchain infrastructure.
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.