Kraken named to FXC Intelligence’s 2026 Cross-Border Payments 100
TL;DR Payward and Kraken have been named to FXC Intelligence’s 2026 Cross-Border Payments 100, the eighth annual market list of the industry’s most important players. The list profiles 100 companies that power global mon...
Archive context
Older archive item. Useful for background and entity history, but not a fresh market-moving signal.
- Payward and Kraken have been named to FXC Intelligence’s 2026 Cross-Border Payments 100, the eighth annual market list of the industry’s most important players.
- The list profiles 100 companies that power global money movement, spanning banks, fintechs, card networks, remittance providers, and stablecoin and blockchain players.
- The announcement underscores Kraken’s expanding footprint in stablecoin infrastructure, tokenized assets, and B2B payments through products including xStocks and Payward Services.
We’re excited to announce that Payward and Kraken have been included in FXC Intelligence’s 2026 Cross-Border Payments 100.
A benchmark for the industry’s leadersThe Cross-Border Payments 100 is published annually by FXC Intelligence, the leading data and intelligence provider in the cross-border payments space.
This year’s list covers every major segment of the industry, from long-established remittance players and global banks to neobanks, B2B platforms, card networks, regional specialists, and stablecoin providers. Together, the companies on the list move trillions of dollars across borders each year.
FXC Intelligence builds the list using its in-house research, granular pricing data, and the combined expertise of its editorial and analyst team. The 2026 ranking will be shared through the firm’s website, social channels, and its weekly newsletter, the most-read publication in cross-border payments.
Crypto’s growing role in cross-border paymentsLast year’s edition reflected the increasing relevance of stablecoins and blockchain infrastructure to global payments, with Paxos, BVNK, and Fireblocks joining the list for the first time and Circle, Ripple, and Stellar returning. Kraken’s inclusion in the 2026 list continues that trajectory.
Cross-border payments are increasingly running on crypto rails. Stablecoins are settling commercial flows in seconds, blockchain networks are connecting markets that legacy infrastructure has historically left underserved, and tokenized assets are opening new ways for capital to move globally.
That intersection is central to what we do. Kraken supports a global client base across spot, derivatives, staking, and on-chain products, with deep liquidity in both crypto-to-fiat and crypto-to-crypto markets.
Products including xStocks (which gives eligible non-US investors on-chain access to tokenized US equities), Kraken Pay, and Payward Services (our B2B payments platform) are built for a world where moving value across borders should be as quick and direct as sending a message.
Our inclusion in FXC Intelligence’s 2026 Cross-Border Payments 100 is an external signal that the lines between traditional cross-border payments and crypto-native infrastructure are continuing to blur, and that Kraken is operating at the center of that shift.
FXC Intelligence Cross-Border Payments 100Geo restrictions apply. Instant buy/sell fees apply when you convert one asset to another before making a transfer. Please see our fee schedule for more information. See Support Center to check your eligibility.
The post Kraken named to FXC Intelligence’s 2026 Cross-Border Payments 100 appeared first on Kraken Blog.
Why this matters
Kraken is showing up inside the Stablecoins theme, so this story is worth tracking for follow-through rather than treating it as a one-off headline.
Original source
Read on Kraken BlogRelated market context
Tether freezes 134 ISIS terror wallets as stablecoins now sit inside the sanctions machine
ISIS-K, the Islamic State affiliate active across Afghanistan, Pakistan, and parts of Central Asia, had USDT balances frozen on 13...
Standard Chartered Unlocks Institutional USDC Access in DIFC, Marking a Banking Industry First
Key Takeaways: Standard Chartered institutionalised the minting and redemption of its odd units of USDC with Circle. When a client...
Circle CEO says Open USD must break USDC’s network effect before its 140 backers matter
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire used Open USD's launch to draw a harder line around USDC's moat: a partner-owned stablecoin can challeng...
ENS DAO sunsets Public Goods Working Group after 4.5 years of funding Ethereum infrastructure
The closure of ENS DAO's Public Goods Working Group may shift funding dynamics, impacting Ethereum's infrastructure development an...
Democratic Republic of Congo launches stock exchange with IFC backing to unlock mining and infrastructure capital
The DRC's new stock exchange could transform its economy by attracting global investment, enhancing transparency, and boosting inf...
Coinbase helped build USDC – Why is it now backing the stablecoin trying to replace it, Open USD?
The stablecoin market has long rewarded the companies that issue digital dollars. They take in customer cash, hold reserves in sho...