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Why CFOs should pay attention to Open USD—the new stablecoin backed by more than 140 companies

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Why CFOs should pay attention to Open USD—the new stablecoin backed by more than 140 companies

Good morning. For CFOs across banks, payments companies, and nonbank lenders, Open Standard’s launch of Open USD, a new stablecoin for global money movement, deserves more than a cursory glance at yet another stablecoin brand.

With more than 140 financial institutions, payment networks, and technology partners—including Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Stripe, BlackRock, Citizens Bank, and Coinbase—participating, announced this week, Open USD represents a test of whether shared infrastructure for tokenized dollars can move from concept to operating reality.

Unlike most stablecoins, Open USD, expected to launch later this year, will be operated by an independent company governed by a board composed of partner organizations, meaning decisions on reserves, redemption rules, and technical standards are intended to be made collectively rather than by a single issuer.

Stephen Tu, vice president of Moody’s Ratings Financial Institutions Group, said Open USD is still in its early stages but sees it as a potentially significant cross-industry consortium seeking to shape the next generation of stablecoin payment infrastructure.

“Its structure reflects a broader trend also seen in tokenized deposits, where consortium-based models may have advantages over single-issuer approaches by aligning incentives, broadening distribution and supporting interoperability through shared governance,”  Tu said in an email to CFO Daily.

The economic model differs from today’s dominant stablecoins. Rather than concentrating reserve income with a single issuer, Open USD says partners will be able to mint and redeem tokens at no cost while sharing reserve earnings after a management fee.

For finance leaders managing settlement collateral, cross-border liquidity, or large payment flows, that raises the possibility of turning what are often idle settlement balances into assets that generate income within a governance framework that participants help oversee.

The execution will be the determining factor for success. “Its impact will depend on whether those partners route meaningful volume through it rather than simply adding another token to existing payment rails,” Tu said.

The timing reflects broader changes in digital payments. Stablecoin transaction volumes have grown dramatically in recent years, although a significant share of activity still comes from digital-asset markets rather than everyday commercial payments. The longer-term opportunity lies in whether tokenized dollars become part of mainstream treasury operations, cross-border settlement, and institutional payments.

Infrastructure........

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