Open USD stablecoin is the new shared payments push from Open Standard, bringing Visa, Mastercard, Coinbase, Stripe and more than 140 other companies into one proposed digital-money infrastructure effort. Open Standard announced Open USD on June 30, describing it as a stablecoin for global money movement rather than a consumer wallet or exchange product.
What Open Standard Announced
The pitch is simple, but the partner list is the real signal. Open Standard says Open USD, also listed as OUSD, has no minting or redemption fees. It also sends most reserve earnings back to participating businesses after a management fee. Therefore, the project looks less like another crypto token. It looks more like an attempt to make stablecoins shared financial plumbing.
That distinction matters because payment networks keep moving stablecoins closer to mainstream rails. Visa says Open USD gives businesses the economics, governance and reliability needed to move money. Meanwhile, Mastercard framed the project around shared infrastructure and interoperability, according to Open Standard’s announcement.
Why The Partner List Matters
Coinbase is also on the list. So are crypto-native names such as Base, Solana, Ripple, OKX, Crypto.com, Fireblocks, Gemini and MetaMask. However, Open Standard’s roster stretches well beyond crypto companies. It includes banks, processors, card networks, commerce platforms and technology firms. BlackRock, BNY, Google, Shopify, Samsung Electronics, DoorDash, Western Union and Mercado Libre all appear in the announcement.
For readers who follow payments, the Open USD stablecoin announcement fits a wider shift. Stablecoin projects now sit beside hardware, banks and financial apps. Tech My Money recently covered Tether and Georgia’s GELT stablecoin plan. We also covered Cash App Wand’s NFC payment accessory. Both stories show money movement becoming more software-defined.
What Still Has To Happen
Still, Open USD is not live yet. Open Standard says it will launch later this year. As a result, the announcement does not turn the partner list into a finished network today. The useful takeaway is narrower. Major payment, banking, commerce and crypto companies now back a shared stablecoin model with formal governance and reserve-sharing economics.
If Open Standard turns those names into working infrastructure, Open USD could test a bigger question. Can stablecoins move from isolated crypto rails into everyday business payments? If it stalls, the announcement still shows pressure on traditional networks. They want to shape stablecoin standards before another group defines them.
