Chainlink’s latest stablecoin push targets the capital stuck in bank FX settlement

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Chainlink’s Project Pangea turns stablecoins toward a quieter but consequential job: helping banks settle foreign-exchange trades with less time between trade execution and final exchange of funds.

The June 23 announcement from Chainlink describes a framework for T+0 international FX settlement designed around compliant fiat-referenced digital assets, including EUR and KRW stablecoins.

T+0, or same-day settlement, means a transaction is completed, and ownership and payment are exchanged on the same day the trade is executed, rather than waiting one or more business days for final settlement.

That makes the project a test of settlement risk. If a euro stablecoin and a Korean won stablecoin can move against each other in direct payment-versus-payment settlement, the useful outcome is a shorter window in which one party has paid while the other side is still waiting.

The potential reward is freed-up capital and lower counterparty exposure if controlled bank trials show the model can work beyond an announcement.

A bank workflow test for FX desks

Project Pangea centers on a specific institutional problem: FX markets are constantly moving, but settlement often depends on processes that separate trade execution from the final exchange of funds. The announcement frames the target as a shift from slower settlement cycles to T+0 atomic settlement, in which both currency legs are exchanged simultaneously.

In plain English, the test asks whether compliant stablecoins can become settlement instruments for banks while those banks keep the messaging rails they already know. Chainlink’s capital markets materials describe the project as connecting bank instructions through existing SWIFT infrastructure and ISO 20022 messaging, with Chainlink infrastructure translating those instructions into on-chain settlement activity.

Swift’s own ISO 20022 guidance shows why that workflow compatibility is important. ISO 20022 is the structured messaging standard through which banks increasingly coordinate cross-border payment instructions.

The EUR/KRW pairing is also important. The framework points to compliant regional currencies, with Qivalis representing the euro side and FairSquareLab and UniKA tied to the Korean market.

That keeps the experiment focused on whether stablecoins can support bank FX settlement between jurisdictions that already have their own regulatory and banking systems.

A compact way to read the announcement is to separate what the project is testing from what banks still need to see.

Project Pangea is testingWhat banks still need to seeA framework for T+0 FX settlement using compliant EUR and KRW stablecoinsScaled bank use for live FX settlementA payment-versus-payment design for both sides of a currency tradeBank-grade liquidity, redemption, and dispute handlingA way to preserve Swift and ISO 20022-style bank workflows while changing settlement mechanicsOperational approvals inside treasury, legal, risk, and compliance teamsAn institutional settlement and capital-efficiency experimentClear rules for the exact stablecoins used in real transactions

The institutional value sits beyond raw transfer speed. Pangea aims at the harder operating question of whether regulated stablecoins can reduce the operational and counterparty risk embedded in institutional FX settlement.

Payment-versus-payment links the delivery of one currency to the delivery of the other. In traditional FX operations, settlement delays can leave firms exposed if one leg completes before the other.

Pangea’s atomic-settlement framing says the euro and won legs should move together, which would reduce that mismatch if the framework works in controlled bank trials.

That is where stablecoins become bank infrastructure rather than consumer tokens. A compliant EUR stablecoin and a compliant KRW stablecoin would need reliable issuance, redemption, liquidity, controls, and legal treatment before banks could rely on them for production settlement.

The announcement describes a framework and development path ahead of any completed market utility.

The announcement lends the framework institutional weight by citing a working group spanning Europe and South Korea that collectively manages more than $10 trillion in assets, including Qivalis’ 37-bank euro stablecoin consortium and UniKA’s Korean banking coalition. Those figures are Chainlink’s framing, while adoption still depends on bank trials, liquidity, operating approvals, and legal treatment across both currency legs.

A pilot can demonstrate that messages, token transfers, and compliance controls fit together. The harder step is turning that technical fit into routines accepted by treasurers, legal teams, regulators, liquidity providers, and operations desks.

The live tension is therefore practical rather than ideological: stablecoins are being tested against a real banking pain point, while the project still needs real transaction volume before it becomes market infrastructure.

The euro and Korean legs still need operating details

Qivalis gives the euro side of the project a more institutional profile. ING said in May that Qivalis had reached 37 bank participants and planned to launch a regulated euro-denominated stablecoin in the second half of 2026, subject to regulatory approval.

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That background helps explain why Pangea’s euro component is more bank-shaped than a placeholder currency leg would be.

CryptoSlate has also covered Europe’s bank-backed stablecoin push as a test of whether on-chain finance develops a stronger euro base while dollar stablecoins dominate. For Pangea, the relevance is operational: FX settlement between EUR and KRW depends on more than a technical bridge.

It requires bank-grade confidence that the currency tokens are acceptable instruments in the markets where they circulate.

The exact settlement assets and the regulatory path remain open. A live pilot would still need to identify the specific EUR or KRW stablecoins involved, whether early tests use real-value or controlled-trial flows, and how liquidity and redemption would work across the pair.

Those details will decide whether the framework becomes bank infrastructure or stays a well-designed experiment.

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