Deepdive
by Soumen Datta
June 12, 2026

Stellar's anchor network powers cross-border payment corridors with partners like MoneyGram, Circle and Bitso. Here is how the settlement system works.
Stellar is a blockchain network built specifically for fast, low-cost cross-border payments and asset issuance, and it functions as the settlement layer for real-world remittance corridors operated by a network of regulated partner companies, known as anchors.
Unlike general-purpose smart contract platforms, Stellar's core design centers on a built-in decentralized exchange and a payment protocol that lets different currencies and assets move between parties through this anchor network.
As of 2025, Stellar's Anchor Directory listed dozens of active anchors supporting more than 170 fiat currencies globally. This article looks at how that infrastructure works, which partners use it, and what role USDC plays on the network today.
Stellar was created in 2014 by Jed McCaleb, who previously co-founded Ripple, and the network is maintained by the Stellar Development Foundation, a nonprofit organization. Stellar's consensus mechanism, called the Stellar Consensus Protocol, is based on a model known as federated Byzantine agreement, which allows transactions to settle in a few seconds at a cost of fractions of a cent per transaction.
The core building block of Stellar's payment system is the anchor. An anchor is a regulated entity, typically a licensed money services business or financial institution, that issues digital tokens representing real-world currency on the Stellar network and allows users to redeem those tokens for the underlying fiat currency.
When someone sends money across a Stellar-based corridor, an anchor on the sending side issues a token representing the deposited currency, the token moves across the network, and an anchor on the receiving side redeems it for local currency, often through mobile money or bank payout.
A distinguishing technical feature of Stellar is its native decentralized exchange, built directly into the protocol rather than added through a separate smart contract. This exchange allows assets issued by different anchors to be automatically converted through a process called path payments, where the network finds the most efficient series of trades to convert one asset into another, even across multiple currency pairs, within a single atomic transaction. This means a payment can be sent in one currency and received in a completely different currency without the sender or receiver needing to manually execute a currency exchange.
MoneyGram, one of the largest remittance companies in the world, partnered with the Stellar Development Foundation to launch MoneyGram Access, a service that allows users to convert cash to and from USDC at MoneyGram locations using the Stellar network as the settlement layer. This integration allows someone to deposit cash in one country, have it represented as USDC on Stellar, and have a recipient withdraw cash in a different country, with Stellar handling the on-chain settlement step between deposit and payout.
This corridor is significant because it connects MoneyGram's large existing network of physical cash agent locations to blockchain-based settlement, meaning a user does not need to already hold a crypto wallet or understand blockchain technology to benefit from the underlying settlement speed. The cash-to-crypto and crypto-to-cash conversion happens at the MoneyGram counter, while Stellar handles the movement of value between the two locations in the background.
The MoneyGram integration illustrates the practical mechanics of Stellar's anchor model:
This flow removes the need for multiple correspondent banking relationships between the two countries, since the settlement step happens on Stellar rather than through a chain of intermediary banks.
Beyond MoneyGram, Stellar's anchor ecosystem includes a broad range of regional financial institutions and fintechs, each serving different corridors and currencies. Some of the most strategically important anchors include the following:
A number of other anchors extend Stellar's reach into specific regional markets and use cases:
Circle, the issuer of USDC, has supported USDC issuance natively on the Stellar network since 2021, and also issues EURC, a euro-denominated stablecoin, on Stellar. This gives Stellar-based applications and anchors access to widely recognized, fiat-pegged stablecoins without relying on bridged or wrapped versions of these tokens.
USDC on Stellar functions as the primary settlement asset used in the MoneyGram Access corridor and other anchor-based remittance flows, since a dollar-denominated stablecoin provides a stable intermediate asset for converting between two different local currencies. EURC plays a similar role for corridors involving European currencies, particularly where anchors such as Tempo provide the connecting banking rails.
It is worth noting that USDC's circulating supply and trading volume on Stellar are smaller than its presence on larger chains such as Ethereum, Solana, and Base. Stellar represents one issuance venue among several for USDC, with anchor-driven remittance activity being a primary driver of USDC usage on this particular chain.
A common point of comparison is XRP, another network historically associated with cross-border payments. The key structural difference is that Stellar's anchor model has historically relied on a broad network of regional financial institutions and fintechs, such as Bitso
in Latin America, Coins.ph in the Philippines, and Cowrie and ClickPesa in Africa, rather than a small number of large banking partners. This distributed anchor network is one of Stellar's strongest assets for remittances, stablecoin liquidity, and tokenized real-world assets, since it allows the network to plug into many regional payment systems simultaneously rather than depending on a handful of major institutional relationships.
Stellar's role in cross-border payments centers on its anchor model and built-in decentralized exchange, which together allow value to move between different currencies and jurisdictions through a single settlement layer.
As of 2025, the Stellar Anchor Directory listed dozens of active anchors supporting more than 170 fiat currencies.
MoneyGram Access remains the most recognizable example. It connects MoneyGram's physical cash network to Stellar-based USDC settlement. The broader ecosystem goes further.
Circle provides USDC and EURC liquidity. Tempo supports European banking rails. Settle Network covers Latin American corridors. Bitso and Coins.ph handle major exchange and remittance flows.
Smaller regional anchors round out the network, including Cowrie, ClickPesa, Anclap, BlindPay, Zeam Money, Vibrant and Flutterwave. This is a distributed network of regional financial institutions and fintechs, not a handful of large banking partners. That structure is one of Stellar's core strengths for remittances, stablecoin liquidity, and tokenized real-world assets.
Disclaimer
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent the views of BSCN. The information provided in this article is for educational and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice, or advice of any kind. BSCN assumes no responsibility for any investment decisions made based on the information provided in this article. If you believe that the article should be amended, please reach out to the BSCN team by emailing info@bsc.news.
Author

Soumen Datta
Soumen has been a crypto researcher since 2020 and holds a master’s in Physics. His writing and research has been published by publications such as CryptoSlate and DailyCoin, as well as BSCN. His areas of focus include Bitcoin, DeFi, and high-potential altcoins like Ethereum, Solana, XRP, and Chainlink. He combines analytical depth with journalistic clarity to deliver insights for both newcomers and seasoned crypto readers.
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