
Stables partners with Mansa to add on‑demand liquidity and compliance‑first infrastructure to Asia’s fiat‑to‑USDT corridors, targeting the region’s 60% share of global stablecoin flows.
Summary
- Stables teams up with Mansa to power dedicated liquidity for its fiat‑to‑USDT payment corridors across Asia’s 150 currencies.
- Asia drives 60% of global stablecoin flows, but only 1% of local banks support stablecoin rails, leaving cross‑border liquidity badly fragmented.
- Mansa has processed $394 million across 40+ corridors since 2024 and now supplies short‑term liquidity for Stables’ $1.5 billion annualized volume.
Stablecoins have quietly become Asia’s preferred digital plumbing, with payments sent from the region now accounting for about $245 billion, or roughly 60% of global stablecoin payment volume, making infrastructure plays like Stables’ fiat‑to‑USDT corridors and its new liquidity partnership with Mansa central to how real cross‑border money actually moves.
Stables positions itself as an API‑first orchestration layer that helps fintechs integrate USDT payments and settlements via a single interface covering compliance, banking and stablecoin conversion. The company says it now processes more than $1.5 billion in annualized payment volume, while handling identity verification, sanctions screening and travel‑rule checks for clients seeking to use stablecoins without stitching together multiple vendors.
Stables and Mansa finance develop rails for Asian stablecoins
Mansa, which describes its model as “settlement‑time liquidity infrastructure,” will inject short‑term capital so that Stables’ on‑ramps and off‑ramps remain operational during volatility, replacing static prefunding with on‑demand stablecoin‑backed credit. “Stables has built exactly what Asia’s stablecoin market has been missing – a compliance‑first API that works across 150 currencies,” Mansa co‑founder and CEO Mouloukou Sanoh said, adding that as institutions shift to stablecoin payments, “that kind of infrastructure becomes essential” and “we’re excited to be the liquidity behind it – making sure the capital is there when the volume shows up.”
The partnership also reflects a broader evolution in payment infrastructure, where specialist providers assemble modular stacks rather than trying to own every part of the flow themselves. Stables holds licenses in Australia, Europe and Canada as a digital currency exchange, virtual asset service provider and money‑services business, and says it aims to be “the primary orchestration layer” for the USDT ecosystem in Asia as it expands its corridor network for fintechs and digital banks.
In earlier crypto.news coverage of stablecoin market structure and Asia’s digital money race, regulated rails and orchestration layers have been framed as the missing link between tokenized dollars and real‑economy payments, a gap this latest tie‑up between Stables and Mansa is designed to close in this story, this story and this story.





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