Stablecoins have slowly moved beyond crypto trading. Over the past few years they started appearing in something much more practical: payment infrastructure.
That shift became clearer this week. KAST announced an $80 million Series A round led by QED Investors and Left Lane Capital, with participation from Peak XV, HSG and DST Global Partners.
The company is building a financial platform powered by stablecoins. The idea is simple. Let users earn globally, hold digital dollars, and spend locally through a single system.
For fintech founders, the interesting part is not only the funding. It is the timing. Stablecoins are increasingly part of the global payments conversation, and startups like KAST are positioning themselves right at that intersection.
The problem KAST is trying to solve
Cross-border payments still feel unnecessarily complicated.
Money often moves through multiple intermediaries. Settlement can take days. Fees stack up along the way. Anyone who has worked with international payments knows the routine.
KAST approaches the problem from a different angle. Instead of improving existing payment rails, the platform connects stablecoin balances with local payout systems. Funds can move between digital assets and traditional financial infrastructure.
In practice, the product looks somewhat familiar. Users hold stablecoins in an account-like environment, transfer funds globally, and spend through cards connected to existing payment networks.
The ambition is straightforward: make stablecoins behave more like everyday money.
Early traction is already visible
KAST launched less than two years ago, yet the platform already reports more than one million users.
Transaction activity is growing quickly. The company reports roughly $5 billion in annualized transaction volume, which suggests usage is moving beyond experimentation.
Revenue has also doubled since September 2025, signaling strong early demand for the product.
Following the new funding round, KAST is valued at around $600 million and expects annual revenue to reach roughly $100 million.
For a relatively young company, those numbers suggest stablecoin financial products are moving from early curiosity toward a real fintech category.
What the new funding will support
The new capital will mainly go toward scaling the platform.
KAST plans to expand its product capabilities, grow the team, and continue building the regulatory infrastructure required to operate across multiple markets.
Geographically, the company is focusing on North America, Latin America and the Middle East.
Another part of the roadmap is KAST Business, a product designed for companies that need stablecoin payment infrastructure.
The direction is fairly clear. Build the financial layer where stablecoins connect with regulated financial systems and real-world spending tools.
If stablecoins continue moving toward mainstream payments, platforms sitting between crypto rails and traditional finance will become increasingly important.
Key takeaways for fintech startups
A few practical observations stand out from this announcement.
• Stablecoins are slowly shifting from crypto trading tools toward payment infrastructure.
• Cross-border payments remain one of the largest open opportunities in fintech.
• Venture capital continues backing stablecoin payment platforms despite volatility in the crypto market.
• Early traction matters. One million users and meaningful transaction volume helped support this Series A.
• Regulatory work and licensing remain essential parts of scaling stablecoin financial products.
If you are building a fintech startup and want to sharpen your strategy, reach out to us.
At Your Fintech Story, we help fintech founders grow with clearer positioning and stronger go-to-market thinking. Contact us.