
As stablecoins emerge as the most practical use case in blockchain technology — eclipsing speculative tokens with real-world utility in payments and settlement — XDC Network is capitalizing on the shift, processing $1.3 billion in USDC transactions over the past 90 days while many crypto networks struggle to demonstrate tangible value.
According to on-chain analytics firm Token Terminal, this transaction volume marks a significant milestone for the network and demonstrates the kind of high-velocity capital movement that banks and payment companies are increasingly seeking as alternatives to traditional correspondent banking systems that can take days and cost significantly more per transaction.
As financial institutions accelerate their adoption of digital dollar technology, XDC Network’s activity offers a glimpse of what 2026 could bring: the year blockchain-based payment rails move from experimental to essential.
Unlike speculation-driven cryptocurrency activity, this transaction volume reflects practical use: moving money quickly across borders, settling trades instantly, and reducing costs for businesses operating internationally. The shift marks a quiet but significant change in how major financial players view blockchain technology — not as an investment asset, but as utility infrastructure.
The infrastructure is already in place. Circle’s USDC stablecoin now operates across 15 blockchain networks with security protocols designed for institutional use. Networks like XDC offer minimal transaction fees rather than the $30-50 typical of international wire transfers, while settling in seconds instead of days.
Major cryptocurrency exchanges have already integrated XDC for low-cost transfers, effectively treating the network as a payment highway rather than a destination. This “flow-through” model — where capital moves rapidly rather than accumulating — represents how institutional players are beginning to use blockchain networks.
Major banks spent 2024 and 2025 testing stablecoin systems in controlled environments. JPMorgan, Citi, and other institutions launched pilot programs for instant settlement and treasury management using digital dollars. Industry analysts expect 2026 to be the year these experiments scale into everyday operations.
The infrastructure is already in place. Circle’s USDC stablecoin now operates across 15 blockchain networks with security protocols designed for institutional use. Networks like XDC offer transaction fees measured in pennies rather than the $30-50 typical of international wire transfers, while settling in seconds instead of days.
“The economics are compelling enough that adoption becomes inevitable,” one financial services analyst noted. “When you can move $10 million internationally for under a dollar in fees and have it settle in minutes, the old system starts looking expensive and slow.”
Major cryptocurrency exchanges have already integrated XDC for low-cost transfers, effectively treating the network as a payment highway rather than a destination. This “flow-through” model — where capital moves rapidly rather than accumulating — represents how institutional players are beginning to use blockchain networks.
Stablecoin legislation advancing in the U.S. and Europe could provide banks with regulatory clarity to expand services, while payment companies like Visa and Mastercard continue exploring broader integration. As more banks offer instant settlement options and corporate treasurers assess the cost and speed benefits, stablecoin infrastructure may see increased use in routine business operations. The pace of adoption will likely depend on how effectively early adopters demonstrate practical advantages over existing systems.
ComtechXDC’s throughput numbers suggest this transition is already underway. The network isn’t holding massive reserves of capital; it’s moving it efficiently from point A to point B, exactly what payment infrastructure should do.
If institutional adoption follows the trajectory that early data suggests, 2026 may be remembered as the year blockchain technology proved its value not through price speculation, but through practical utility in the global financial system.

