Ripple has entered a new payments partnership with Convera, the former Western Union Business Solutions unit, as stablecoin-based settlement moves further into commercial finance. The agreement is focused on cross-border payments and treasury services for businesses, combining Ripple’s blockchain settlement infrastructure with Convera’s foreign exchange and global payments network.
Convera operates across more than 140 currencies in about 200 countries and territories. The company said the new arrangement is designed to help businesses move money faster and with more flexibility in corridors where traditional payment rails can still be slow or expensive. Ripple said the structure is aimed at enterprise users that want blockchain efficiency without directly handling digital assets.
We’re partnering with Convera to expand enterprise cross-border payments.
Together, we’re combining global payment rails with stablecoin-enabled settlement to improve speed, liquidity, and reliability.https://t.co/OTa8apYIZa
— Ripple (@Ripple) March 31, 2026
The collaboration uses what both companies described as a stablecoin sandwich model. In that setup, a payment starts in fiat currency, moves through a stablecoin-based settlement layer, and ends in fiat again. That allows business users to benefit from blockchain settlement while avoiding direct crypto custody and operational complexity.
Convera Chief Executive Patrick Gauthier said the company has been watching customer demand and the growth of stablecoins and crypto in payments. Ripple Senior Vice President of Product Aaron Slettehaugh said enterprises are looking for faster global money movement without having to manage digital assets directly.
The partnership gives Ripple access to a larger commercial payments network, while Convera adds blockchain-based liquidity and settlement capabilities to its existing business platform. Convera serves more than 26,000 customers and has built its core business around cross-border transfers and foreign exchange services for enterprises.
Ripple has been expanding that same type of institutional footprint through partnerships and infrastructure deals. The company said earlier this year that Ripple Payments now reaches more than 90% of daily foreign exchange markets and has processed over $95 billion in volume to date. More recently, Ripple joined the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s BLOOM initiative to test programmable cross-border trade settlement using the XRP Ledger and RLUSD.
That broader background provides context for the Convera deal. Stablecoins are becoming more important in business payments because they can reduce settlement delays and provide more flexible movement of funds across different markets. Major financial firms, card networks, and fintech companies are all testing how blockchain-based payment systems can support commercial transfers.
A key detail in the new arrangement is that enterprise customers will not need to operate as crypto users. Ripple will provide the underlying liquidity, cross-border settlement, and on-ramp and off-ramp infrastructure, while Convera manages the customer-facing payment process.
That design is important because many businesses still want the speed and settlement benefits tied to blockchain without changing treasury systems, custody procedures, or internal controls. The stablecoin sandwich approach addresses that concern by keeping digital assets in the middle layer of the transaction rather than at either end of the customer experience.
The agreement also reflects a broader market trend in which blockchain is increasingly used in the background rather than presented as a separate payment product. That approach has already appeared in other areas of digital payments, where stablecoins and blockchain networks are being tested as settlement tools rather than consumer-facing assets.
While Ripple’s payments business continues to expand, XRP price action remains under pressure in the near term. Market analyst CasiTrades said the token is showing weak momentum and has struggled to hold the $1.32 area, which is now being watched as a resistance zone. According to the analysis, repeated relief bounces have stalled near the 0.382 retracement level, which suggests sellers remain active.
The analyst said XRP has remained near its 200-week exponential moving average for eight straight weeks, positioning the token at an important technical level.
Source: X
In that framework, a break lower could open the way toward support levels near $1.09 and $1.06, followed by a broader support area around $0.87. A short-term relief move, if it develops, is being tracked in the $1.22-$1.31 range.
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