Visa and Brale Test Private Stablecoin Settlement on Canton Network
Visa (NYSE: V) announced on June 4, 2026, a proof of concept collaboration with stablecoin infrastructure firm Brale to test privacy enabled settlement using SBC , Brale's U.S. dollar backed stablecoin, on the Canton Network , the permissioned blockchain developed by Digital Asset and backed by the largest names in institutional finance. [1][2] The move marks a deliberate pivot from Visa's earlier public chain experiments toward private, bank grade infrastructure designed specifically for counterparties who cannot afford to broadcast their positions or flows on an open ledger. Why Privacy Is the Deciding Variable Visa first enabled stablecoin settlement in 2021 using USDC on Ethereum , a public network where transaction data is visible to any observer. [1] That architecture works for retail and consumer contexts, but it presents a structural obstacle for institutional counterparties. When a large bank settles payment obligations on a public chain, its transaction volumes, counterparties, and net positions become readable by competitors. Canton was designed from the protocol layer up to eliminate that exposure. Unlike overlay privacy solutions that patch confidentiality onto existing public infrastructure, Canton embeds selective data disclosure natively into its Layer 1 architecture. Only transaction participants and authorized regulators can see specific deal data. [3] Atomic settlement across tokenized assets, digital cash instruments, and other financial contracts still occurs on shared infrastructure, but information visibility is restricted by design rather than by application level workarounds. Rubail Birwadker , Visa's Global Growth Products and Strategy Lead, articulated the institutional concern plainly when Visa became a Super Validator on Canton in March 2026: "Many banks believe that the lack of privacy is the biggest barrier to moving substantive business onto the chain." [4] SBC as the Settlement Instrument SBC is Brale's native Canton stablecoin, fully backed by U.S. dollar reserves and issued through Brale's regulated infrastructure platform. Brale provides the full issuance stack across minting, redemption, compliance controls, treasury management, and blockchain interoperability through a modular API architecture. [1][5] SBC is natively supported on Canton, which means it does not require bridging or wrapping from another network, removing a category of technical and counterparty risk that has complicated earlier institutional stablecoin deployments. For the proof of concept, Visa and Brale are simulating institutional payment flows using SBC to evaluate whether the token could be added as a supported stablecoin within Visa's existing VisaNet settlement program. The test focuses on programmability alongside privacy: whether smart contract governed settlement logic can be applied to institutional flows without sacrificing the data controls that banks require. [2] "Stablecoin settlement has shown how blockchain infrastructure can improve the speed and efficiency of money movement. Through our work with Brale, we're exploring how SBC on the Canton Network can support institutional settlement use cases that require both programmability and privacy controls. This collaboration helps us evaluate what it takes to bring these capabilities into production environments." Cuy Sheffield, Head of Crypto, Visa [1] Canton's Institutional Roster The Canton Network's Super Validator set includes some of the largest regulated financial institutions in the world. As of mid 2026, the network handles more than $6 trillion in tokenized real world assets across more than 600 participating institutions, with daily transaction volume exceeding 500,000 operations. [4] The table below captures key participants and their roles: | Institution | Role on Canton | Notable Activity | | | | | | JPMorgan (Kinexys) | Super Validator | JPM Coin native deployment on Canton, January 2026 | | Goldman Sachs | Super Validator | Permissioned settlement and tokenized asset infrastructure | | BNP Paribas | Super Validator | Cross border institutional payment flows | | DTCC | Super Validator | Tokenizing DTC custodied U.S. Treasury securities, 2026 | | Broadridge | Super Validator | Repo and securities settlement | | Tradeweb | Super Validator | Fixed income trading infrastructure | | Visa | Super Validator (Weight 10) | Payment rail governance; stablecoin settlement POC | | Brale | Active Validator | Native SBC stablecoin issuance and institutional onboarding | Visa was approved as a Weight 10 Super Validator, the maximum governance tier, in March 2026, just three days after submitting its Canton Improvement Proposal. [4] Visa holds voting rights over governance decisions and has made private commitments to the Canton Foundation's Tokenomics and Accountability Committees. The Brale proof of concept is the first publicly disclosed operational step since that governance entry. Visa's Stablecoin Settlement Timeline The progression from Visa's 2021 USDC pilot to the 2026 Canton collaboration reflects a systematic move from retail grade public chains toward institutional grade permissioned infrastructure: | Year | Milestone | Chain or Instrument | | | | | | 2021 | Visa enables stablecoin settlement for VisaNet obligations | USDC on Ethereum | | 2023 2024 | Expands supported stablecoins; adds more issuer partnerships | Multiple public chains | | March 2026 | Approved as Weight 10 Super Validator on Canton Network | Canton (Digital Asset) | | May 2026 | Partners with WeFi for stablecoin funded card payments (Europe, Asia, LatAm) | Multiple networks | | June 2026 | Launches POC with Brale for private institutional settlement using SBC | Canton Network | The directional logic is consistent: public chain experimentation establishes proof of concept for stablecoin settlement mechanics, while permissioned chain investment builds the governance credibility and infrastructure needed to serve regulated institutions. [1][3] Priva…