Crypto & Web3

Western Union’s USDPT stablecoin goes live for trading on Kraken

Western Union’s USDPT stablecoin goes live for trading on Kraken

Kraken announcement artwork for USDPT stablecoin listing

Stablecoins stopped being a crypto-native curiosity a while ago, but the roster of issuers still tends to read like a list of exchanges and protocol labs. That changed again on July 9, 2026, when Kraken opened trading for USDPT — the U.S. Dollar Payment Token — a USD-backed stablecoin issued by Anchorage Digital Bank and built on Solana, and the on-chain incarnation of Western Union’s payments network (source: Kraken Blog).

What USDPT actually is

USDPT is a payment-purpose stablecoin: one token, redeemable for one U.S. dollar, designed for moving value rather than for yield or speculation. The backing entity is Western Union, the remittance company with a physical footprint of nearly 500,000 retail locations serving 150+ million customers across 200+ countries and territories. The issuer is Anchorage Digital Bank, a federally chartered crypto bank — meaning the token is brought to market by a regulated custodian rather than an offshore foundation, a detail that matters more now that U.S. payment-stablecoin legislation has raised the bar for who can issue.

Technically it lives on Solana, which is what gives USDPT its headline property: near real-time settlement at fractions of a cent per transfer. That’s the whole point of the asset — it’s not trying to be a better store of value than a dollar, it’s trying to be a faster rail for the dollars Western Union already moves.

Why a remittance giant is issuing on-chain

Western Union’s business is the last-mile transfer of money to places where banking infrastructure is thin. Stablecoins are, awkwardly for legacy players, very good at exactly that problem: a token transfer settles in seconds and doesn’t care whether the recipient is next door or three borders away. Issuing USDPT lets Western Union plug its existing agent network into a programmable, on-chain dollar without rebuilding the plumbing from scratch.

The play is enterprise-grade payments and global value transfer first, retail remittance second. A token backed by a name borrowers already trust in cash economies — and issued by a U.S. federal bank charter — is a different risk profile than the anonymous stablecoins that dominated the last cycle. For recipients who’ve never held crypto, the difference between “a dollar sent by a protocol” and “a dollar sent by Western Union” is the difference between adoption and a shrug.

What Kraken listing means for traders

Trading went live on July 9, 2026. Deposits require using a Solana network address Kraken supports; the exchange explicitly warns that deposits sent on unsupported networks will be lost, the standard stablecoin footgun that has eaten more funds than any exploit. USDPT joins a Kraken stablecoin shelf that already includes the major dollar tokens, so its differentiation isn’t availability — it’s provenance.

For the trader, USDPT is a lower-volatility pairing asset rather than a directional bet. Its interest lies in watching whether a token with a household-name backer and a chartered-bank issuer draws flows that pure-crypto stablecoins don’t, and whether the remittance use case translates into real on-chain volume or stays a press-release product.

The bigger picture

Every quarter seems to add one more “we’re not a crypto company, but here’s our token” entrant, and USDPT is among the most structurally serious: a regulated issuer, a real-world distribution network, and a settlement layer that actually fits the use case. Whether it becomes a settlement rail people use or a trophy in Western Union’s innovation deck is the open question. What’s not in question is that the stablecoin issuer list now includes one of the oldest money-movers on the planet.

That last point is the one worth watching. The previous stablecoin cycle was defined by crypto-native issuers fighting for exchange listings and DeFi integration. This one is increasingly defined by incumbents — payment networks, banks, and now a remittance incumbent — treating a token as infrastructure they issue rather than a competitor they fear. Anchorage Digital’s federal charter is the connective tissue: it lets a 170-year-old money transmitter issue a dollar token without stepping outside the regulatory perimeter that institutional partners require. If USDPT finds real volume, expect the pattern to repeat with other non-bank financial brands that already move money at scale but lack a programmable rail. The token’s success won’t be measured in price — it’s a dollar — but in whether those 500,000 Western Union counters start meaning “on-chain deposit point” as often as they mean “cash pickup.”

We may earn commission from affiliate links at no extra cost to you. Last updated: Jul 17, 2026.
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