From Castaway to Precious Asset: Mastercard Buys BVNK for $1.8 Billion

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Title: From Underdog to High-Price Target: Mastercard Acquires BVNK for $1.8 Billion

Author: Sanqing

Source:

Repost: Mars Finance

On March 17, global payments giant Mastercard announced the acquisition of stablecoin infrastructure provider BVNK. The deal’s valuation is up to $1.8 billion, including $300 million in contingent payments. Mastercard expects to complete the transaction by the end of this year to expand its end-to-end support capabilities in digital assets and cross-currency value transfer.

The Value of the Underdog: Coinbase’s Hesitation and Mastercard’s Decisiveness

Founded in 2021 and headquartered in London, BVNK completed a $40 million Series A funding round in May 2022, with a post-money valuation of $340 million. By December 2024, it secured an additional $50 million in Series B funding, raising its valuation to approximately $750 million.

Led by three South African founders, BVNK’s team includes CEO Jesse Hemson-Struthers (serial entrepreneur previously acquired by Naspers and Sportradar), CTO Donald Jackson (blockchain and enterprise systems expert), and CBO Chris Harmse (CFA, former macro and crypto fund partner, specializing in forex and cross-border payments).

This startup has quietly woven a vast network for crypto asset settlement.

Currently, the platform handles approximately $25-30 billion in stablecoin transactions annually. It provides businesses with a seamless channel connecting fiat currencies and stablecoins, supporting cross-chain payments across more than 130 countries and regions worldwide.

Before Mastercard stepped in, the true potential buyer was actually crypto giant Coinbase.

In November 2025, Coinbase engaged in a $2 billion acquisition negotiation with BVNK, entering due diligence and even signing an exclusivity agreement at one point.

As a participant in BVNK’s Series B funding, Coinbase’s involvement would have marked a significant milestone in the expansion of crypto-native companies into core global payment infrastructure. However, both parties ultimately announced the deal’s cancellation within the same month, without disclosing specific reasons for the breakup.

Coinbase retreated, and Mastercard immediately filled the gap with precision.

For a startup with annual revenue of only about $40 million, an $1.8 billion valuation seems financially steep. But this enormous sum isn’t about current profit margins; it’s a ticket to the next-generation settlement network’s monopoly.

Defensive Counterattack: Buying Out to “Bypass Card Networks”

Mastercard’s move is essentially a strategic defensive counterattack.

Stablecoins are visibly eroding the market share of traditional cross-border settlement. With 24/7 operation, low friction costs, and rapid clearing speeds, blockchain-based digital dollars are beginning to shine in B2B payments and cross-border remittances.

In the global financial network, traditional credit card organizations are the most threatened by stablecoin disruption. If multinational corporations and businesses become accustomed to point-to-point on-chain settlements, Mastercard’s centralized fiat routing network risks being marginalized.

If you can’t beat them, buy them.

Mastercard’s Chief Product Officer Jorn Lambert openly acknowledged this. In the acquisition announcement, he stated that most financial institutions and fintech companies are expected to offer digital currency services in the future.

Mastercard’s strategy is clear: to directly integrate BVNK’s existing stablecoin infrastructure and compliance engine into its vast global fiat network. Stablecoins are no longer competitors to card organizations; instead, they are being forcibly incorporated as a highly complementary business subset within their underlying network.

Traditional giants are building high walls with insurmountable capital barriers.

Expanding the Battlefield: Wall Street’s Payment Arena Has No New Players

This isn’t an isolated move by Mastercard; the entire traditional finance sector is fiercely competing for entry into on-chain infrastructure.

Before this acquisition, BVNK was backed by a luxurious lineup of Wall Street capital. In May 2025, Mastercard’s biggest rival, Visa, made a strategic investment in BVNK through its venture arm Visa Ventures.

Then in October, Citigroup’s venture arm Citi Ventures also invested heavily. While Citi declined to disclose specific investment amounts or BVNK’s valuation, it stated in an interview that its valuation exceeded the $750 million of the Series B round.

Even two months before Mastercard’s announcement, Visa announced it was integrating BVNK’s stablecoin settlement capabilities into its core Visa Direct platform to support cross-border digital wallet transfers.

This is both a technical integration and a tacit capital alliance.

Looking across the entire payments industry, Silicon Valley’s hot startup Stripe previously spent $1.1 billion acquiring stablecoin startup Bridge. Before finalizing the BVNK deal, Mastercard was also reported to be in high-stakes negotiations with another crypto infrastructure startup, Zerohash (founded in 2017, headquartered in Chicago), for a deal valued between $1.5 billion and $2 billion.

Traditional payment giants are rapidly consolidating decentralized, fragmented stablecoin liquidity into their familiar business frameworks and regulatory channels through aggressive mergers and acquisitions.

On this highly lucrative table, the ultimate winners are still those old-guard players with deep pockets.

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