- Stables and Mansa have partnered to advance stablecoin development in Asia.
- The agreement creates a dedicated liquid segment for Stables’s fiat-to-USDT corridor, aimed at faster and more reliable cross-border settlement.
Stables and Mansa is trying to solve a problem that has been difficult to ignore in the Asian stablecoin market. The demand is already there. Pipes, according to them, are not.
The two companies announced a technical agreement on April 15 that aims to improve efficiency stablecoin connected across the region, where Asia accounts for about 60% of the world’s stablecoins but only about 1% of local banks support the technology. On the market spread about 150 local currencies, which leaves a big gap between using a stablecoin and the banks that need to be connected to them.
A liquidity layer for the divided region
The agreement is based on a dedicated investment unit of the Stables group for fiat-to-USDT corridors. Essentially, this means that developers and fintech companies using Stables will be able to bypass the friction that comes with decentralized banking relationships and build high-volume businesses faster.
Mansa has provided the financing behind the installation. Since its launch in August 2024, the company says it has processed $394 million in more than 40 corridors. Stables, for its part, says it now handles more than $1.5 billion in annual payment volume, positioning itself as a call center that brings tracking, banking and settlement in a single API.
Compliance and savings go hand in hand
Stables is also leaning heavily on the rules as part of the message. The company said it has licenses in Australia, Europe and Canada, and bills itself as an alternative to toll railways. It manages checks, sanctions and traffic laws for customers, which makes Mansa not only the beauty of the product but also the depth of the service.
Most of the demands are clear. Stables aims to be the USDT calling team in Asia, while Mansa provides the depth of sheets necessary for corridors to operate during high volumes or volatility.
That combination, if it works, could make stablecoins in Asia look a little less expensive and more like real money.






