Meta plans to reenter the stablecoin market later this year,
four years after regulators blocked its earlier digital currency effort, Libra.
The company is preparing to integrate dollar-pegged payments across its social
platforms, according to people familiar with the matter.
Sources cited by Coindesk said Meta issued requests for product proposals to
external firms to help manage stablecoin-based payments. One named Stripe, which acquired the stablecoin
infrastructure firm Bridge last year, as a possible partner. Stripe CEO Patrick
Collison joined Meta’s board in 2025, signaling tighter cooperation between the
two companies.
SCOOP: Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta is planning a stablecoin comeback in H2, eyeing a third-party vendor as a key partner to power payments across Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.@IanAllison123 reportshttps://t.co/NGgZHy9MC0
— CoinDesk (@CoinDesk) February 24, 2026
Meta Sends Out RFPs for Stablecoin Integration
Commenting on the move, fintech analyst Simon Taylor said
Meta’s latest move is about distribution, not reinvention. He added that
stablecoins could become the “settlement layer” for Meta’s AI-driven commerce
as digital agents begin to transact globally.
“I can imagine stablecoins will improve cross border flows
in long-tail markets where Meta already operates, as it does for Deel and
Payoneer today, but think about AI. Meta is earmarking $115-135B in 2026 capex,
mostly for AI. They’re building agents that shop and transact autonomously,
“agentic commerce.”
Meta aims to begin integration in the second half of 2026,
supported by a new wallet feature. Unlike the failed Libra project, Meta’s new
plan relies on third-party payment infrastructure rather than building its own
currency. “They want to do this, but at arm’s length,” one source said.
Regulation and Timing
The renewed push follows the passage of the U.S. GENIUS
Act in 2025, which established rules for stablecoin issuers. The company is
reportedly racing to launch before provisions limiting big tech stablecoin
activity take effect later this year.
Related: Meta Soars 12%, Microsoft Tops $4 Trillion as AI Spending Powers Profits
Meta returning to stablecoins in a second act shaped by its
Libra defeat, a new U.S. law that forces big technology companies into
partnership models, and a broader race among global platforms (Meta, X,
Telegram) to control the stablecoin payments rails rather than the coins
themselves.
Policymakers in the United States and Europe were alarmed at
the idea of a social media company effectively launching a private global
currency, raising concerns over monetary sovereignty, financial stability, and
Meta’s track record on data and privacy.
Meta’s new strategy fits squarely into this more cautious,
infrastructure‑first environment. Rather than issuing its own coin, it
is reportedly sending requests for product proposals to external firms, with
Stripe emerging as a likely partner for underlying stablecoin payments.
This article was written by Jared Kirui at www.financemagnates.com.
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