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I just reviewed something that most people are probably overlooking: the migration to ISO 20022 is already underway, and this is much more important than it seems at first glance.
For decades, banks have been stuck in an outdated system. The FIN network and SWIFT’s MT formats were basically simple text messages that could only move limited information between institutions. Quite primitive compared to what the modern financial world needs.
But here’s the interesting part: with the transition to FINplus and the ISO 20022 standard, everything changes. It’s not just a technical update—it’s a complete repositioning. Now each payment message can carry detailed, machine-readable information, including data about who is sending, what it’s for, and how it should be processed. This opens the door to CBDCs, stablecoins, and tokenized assets in a way that was previously impossible.
What’s fascinating is that until now, banks and blockchains spoke entirely different languages. Banks used closed systems within SWIFT, while blockchain networks like Hedera, Ripple, Stellar, and Quant operated in open, structured formats. ISO 20022 solves that: it becomes the common language that allows both worlds to communicate natively.
With the old MT messages already retired, the global financial system—central banks, commercial banks, payment providers—now operates on the same structured database. And that’s where projects compatible with ISO 20022 gain relevance.
Looking at the current numbers: XRP is at $1.42 ( down 1.39% in 24h), HBAR at $0.09, XLM at $0.17, and QNT at $73.95. These projects that were already positioned for this change are exactly the ones that could govern the next era of cross-border payments.
What I see is that most still don’t connect the dots. ISO 20022 is not just a regulatory change—it’s the gateway for global financial infrastructure and blockchain technology to finally operate on the same level. Those paying attention already know this.