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Just mapped out something that's been bothering me about how institutions actually move money now, and it's way more concentrated than most people realize. The stablecoin settlement story everyone's talking about? It's not about crypto adoption. It's about a handful of companies building rails that were just too good to pass up. Faster, cheaper, 24/7 - and suddenly every major player plugged in. Here's what's actually happening under the hood. Circle and Paxos are basically running the show on the supply side. Circle's USDC moved 8.3 trillion in January alone - that's insane velocity for a single token. Paxos handles the rest: PayPal's PYUSD, Mastercard's USDG, even Mercado Pago's settlement infrastructure. Two minters. That's it. Everything institutional traces back to one of those two. The distribution layer is equally tight. Both minters route stablecoins through the same players - Coinbase, Wintermute, Jane Street. These aren't traditional correspondent banking chains anymore. They're crypto market makers and trading desks sitting between the minters and where the money actually needs to go. When Paxos pushes 89 billion outward, it's not going to banks. It's going to these intermediaries who then distribute for merchant payouts, card settlement, or liquidity provisioning. The custody piece is where it gets really interesting. Fireblocks is holding 150 million in USDG as the largest single holder, but here's the thing - they're also the custody layer for USDC operations on Solana where Visa settles. One provider. Two settlement rails. Straddling both the Mastercard and Visa infrastructure through a single custody point. That concentration matters because it means institutional settlement doesn't just depend on who mints the tokens anymore. It depends on where they sit between creation and redemption. And right now, that's a pretty narrow set of providers. The integration layer shows how different each major player's strategy looks on the surface. Visa went all in - settled 3.5 billion annualized in USDC on Solana, expanded to four stablecoins across four chains, built their own on-chain analytics dashboard tracking 12.9 trillion in volume. Mastercard hedged by enabling four stablecoins across its network. Stripe bought Bridge for 1.1 billion to power stablecoin-linked cards in 101 countries. PayPal just built their own stablecoin - PYUSD hit 3.95 billion supply across 70 markets. JP Morgan settled debt in USDC on Solana. Four totally different strategies. Same underlying infrastructure underneath every single one. That's the pattern that stands out. Nobody built new rails. They all plugged into the same pipes that Circle and Paxos already built. Solana carried 552 billion in stablecoin transfers in January alone - that's where both Visa and PayPal's infrastructure concentrated. The stablecoin settlement layer replaced correspondent banking not because institutions suddenly wanted crypto. It replaced it because a small number of providers built something faster and cheaper and available around the clock, and every major institution decided that was worth it. The stack is four layers deep, and every layer is concentrated. Supply controlled by Circle and Paxos. Distribution through Coinbase and Wintermute. Custody through Fireblocks and exchange cold wallets. Integration happening at Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, and PayPal. That's the infrastructure institutional finance is now scaling on. The question that keeps coming up is whether the next wave of adoption diversifies that dependency or just deepens it further.