Coinbase Adds SGD, AUD, CAD, CHF Fiat Rails via Standard Chartered Partnership
Coinbase deepened its institutional banking partnership with Standard Chartered on May 27, 2026 , unlocking direct fiat funding rails in four new currencies and introducing globally systemically important bank (GSIB) backed settlement for euros and pounds sterling across its institutional platforms. The announcement marks the first time a GSIB has backed Coinbase EUR and GBP settlement, extending a relationship that has quietly become one of the most consequential bank crypto integrations in global markets. New Currency Rails Across Coinbase Prime and Exchange The expanded partnership adds direct deposit, withdrawal, and settlement infrastructure for Singapore dollars (SGD) , Australian dollars (AUD) , Canadian dollars (CAD) , and Swiss francs (CHF) through Standard Chartered's cross border fiat network. Simultaneously, EUR and GBP settlement will operate through GSIB backed infrastructure, a structural upgrade that signals a higher tier of regulatory and liquidity backing than previously available on the platforms [1][2]. All six currency rails are available through Coinbase Prime and Coinbase Exchange , although Coinbase confirmed the feature is not currently available for Prime Trading clients in the European Union . That carve out reflects ongoing regulatory complexity in the EU market, where MiCA and associated rules govern institutional crypto service delivery [3]. | Currency | Rail Type | Settlement Backing | Available On | | | | | | | SGD (Singapore Dollar) | Direct fiat rail | Standard Chartered | Prime, Exchange | | AUD (Australian Dollar) | Direct fiat rail | Standard Chartered | Prime, Exchange | | CAD (Canadian Dollar) | Direct fiat rail | Standard Chartered | Prime, Exchange | | CHF (Swiss Franc) | Direct fiat rail | Standard Chartered | Prime, Exchange | | EUR (Euro) | GSIB backed settlement | GSIB infrastructure | Prime, Exchange (non EU) | | GBP (British Pound) | GSIB backed settlement | GSIB infrastructure | Prime, Exchange (non EU) | For institutional desks managing strategies across spot markets, derivatives, and financing, the friction of routing every position through a single base currency has long represented a hidden operational cost. Converting SGD to USD before deploying capital into BTC or USDC positions, for example, introduces both foreign exchange spread costs and timing risk, particularly in volatile sessions. The new rails allow institutions to fund and settle in the currency they already hold across regional operations [3]. Singapore and the SGD Opportunity The addition of SGD rails carries particular weight in Asia. Standard Chartered has long maintained deep institutional infrastructure in Singapore, where its real time SGD transfer capabilities for Coinbase customers were established through an earlier phase of the partnership in December 2025 [4]. Singapore's Monetary Authority has positioned the city state as a regulated digital asset hub, and Coinbase's expansion of SGD fiat rails directly supports institutional clients who manage treasury positions in Singapore dollars alongside their crypto books. The broader institutional demand trend supports the timing. A survey of 351 global institutional investors conducted ahead of the announcement found that 73% expected to increase crypto allocations in 2026, with growing focus on custody security, compliance, and multi custodian risk management [4]. Providing regulated, bank backed fiat rails in Singapore dollars removes a meaningful operational barrier for asset managers, hedge funds, and trading desks based in or regulated through Singapore. "Clients will increasingly move between local fiat currencies and local stablecoins for faster settlement." That framing from Coinbase situates the Standard Chartered deal within a wider stablecoin infrastructure thesis. Coinbase separately reported that stablecoins settled $33 trillion in transaction volume in 2025 , compared with Visa's $16.7 trillion in payment volume for the same fiscal year [2]. The implication is that fiat rails and stablecoin rails are converging, and the firm that controls both the on ramp and the settlement infrastructure holds structural advantage. Standard Chartered's Digital Asset Strategy Standard Chartered has moved deliberately into digital assets over the past three years, building institutional services around custody, trade finance tokenization, and cross border settlement. The bank's December 2025 framework with Coinbase covered trading, prime services, custody, staking, and lending, with the May 2026 fiat rail expansion representing the operational rollout of that broader architecture [4]. For Standard Chartered, the Coinbase relationship extends its reach into crypto native institutional flows without requiring it to operate exchange infrastructure directly. Its role as settlement counterparty for six major currencies, including now as a GSIB backer for EUR and GBP, positions the bank as critical infrastructure for a segment of institutional capital that continues to grow. This approach mirrors the trajectory of Visa and Mastercard , both of which have pursued stablecoin settlement integration to retain relevance as blockchain native payments challenge legacy card rails [2]. Direct Deposit Returns for Retail Users A day before the Standard Chartered announcement, on May 26 , Coinbase relaunched Direct Deposit for U.S. customers, reactivating a feature it had paused in late 2024 after an earlier 2021 rollout. The updated product allows users to allocate any portion of their paycheck directly into their Coinbase account, with automatic conversion into USDC , cash, or other crypto assets, all with zero trading fees on supported allocations [5]. The relaunch includes a significantly higher deposit ceiling: the previous limit of $25,000 per day has been replaced with a limit of $200,000 per week , calibrated for weekly and biweekly payroll cycles. Users generate an account and routing number through the Coinbase app, share it with t…