JPMorgan Cuts Access for Stablecoin Rivals in Strategic Compliance Flex

JPMorgan Cuts Access for Stablecoin Rivals in Strategic Compliance Flex
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Takeaways
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  • JPMorgan Chase restricted banking access for stablecoin payment firms like Blindpay, citing compliance risks in jurisdictions like Venezuela.
  • The move coincides with the bank scaling its own internal blockchain, Kinexys (formerly Onyx), which now processes $2 billion in daily volume.
  • By severing these rails, JPMorgan protects high-fee legacy remittance corridors (6–8% costs) from stablecoin competitors offering transfers for under 1%.

JPMorgan Chase is thinning the herd of stablecoin payment firms. This week, the bank restricted access for at least two startups, including Blindpay, The Information reported. These firms provide the critical link between the U.S. dollar and emerging market stablecoin users. 

The bank cited the high risk of jurisdictions like Venezuela for the move. However, the decision effectively functions as a strategic flex of institutional muscle to protect its own digital dollar dominance.

The timing of these freezes follows a year of massive growth for stablecoins in the remittance sector. Startups now move billions of dollars across borders faster and cheaper than the legacy SWIFT system. 

By severing the banking rails for these companies, JPMorgan restricts payment corridors that compete with its own wholesale settlement products.

A Selective Compliance Standard

JPMorgan currently operates its own permissioned blockchain called Kinexys (formerly Onyx). This internal network processes roughly $2 billion in daily volume for the bank’s global corporate clients. 

The bank justifies its internal crypto activity through a “closed-loop” system where it controls every participant. External startups like Blindpay offer an open alternative. 

They use public blockchains to reach unbanked populations.  JPMorgan views this as a liability. 

The bank claims these firms cannot sufficiently verify the source of funds in volatile markets. 

This stance allows the bank to “de-risk” by removing clients that challenge its market share. This creates a regulatory moat that only the largest financial institutions can cross.

The Remittance War for the Last Mile

The battle for the “last mile” is a primary driver of this conflict. Stablecoin settlement volume reached parity with Visa in 2024. 

This growth happened because startups successfully bypassed traditional bank fees. Legacy remittance fees in Latin America remain a significant burden for consumers.

Sending money through traditional banks costs an average of 6 to 8%. In specific corridors, those fees can exceed 15 percent. Stablecoin networks reduce these costs to less than 1%.

Startups rely on JPMorgan to hold their fiat reserves and process withdrawals. When a bank freezes these master accounts, the startup cannot fulfill its promise of instant liquidity. 

It forces users back to the expensive, traditional services the banks control.

Chain Street’s Take

JPMorgan isn’t afraid of stablecoin risk. It is afraid of losing the fees. 

By freezing these accounts, the bank is performing a tactical strike on the competition. It uses the “high-risk” label to push out startups that make remittances too cheap for the bank’s comfort.

This isn’t just about Venezuela or KYC. It is about who owns the rails for the digital dollar

JPMorgan wants a world where the only “safe” digital dollar is one moved on a JPMorgan network. The bank is betting that by restricting the bridge-builders today, it can own the entire highway tomorrow. 

Wall Street has decided the digital dollar is too important to leave in the hands of startups.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Why did JPMorgan restrict Blindpay and other stablecoin startups?
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JPMorgan cited "high risk" associated with jurisdictions like Venezuela and the inability to sufficiently verify the source of funds. However, critics argue this "de-risking" strategy is a convenient way to eliminate low-cost competitors challenging the bank's market share.

2. What is Kinexys (formerly Onyx)?
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Kinexys is JPMorgan’s proprietary, permissioned blockchain network. Unlike public blockchains used by startups, it is a closed-loop system for global corporate clients that processes approximately $2 billion in daily transaction volume.

3. How much cheaper are stablecoin remittances compared to banks?
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Traditional bank remittances to regions like Latin America cost an average of 6% to 8%, with some corridors exceeding 15%. Stablecoin networks, utilized by firms like Blindpay, typically reduce these costs to less than 1% while offering near-instant settlement.

4. Is JPMorgan banning crypto?
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No. JPMorgan is not banning crypto technology; it is restricting public crypto competitors. The bank is aggressively building its own private blockchain infrastructure to dominate the "digital dollar" market for institutional clients.

5. What happens when a bank freezes a startup's master account?
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When a bank freezes a master account, the startup loses its ability to convert crypto into fiat currency (off-ramping). This effectively halts their business operations, forcing their users to return to traditional, higher-fee banking services.

The author, a seasoned journalist with no cryptocurrency holdings, presents this article for informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice or an endorsement of any cryptocurrency, security, or other financial instrument. Readers should conduct their own research and, if needed, consult a licensed financial professional before making any financial decisions.