Infrastructure that enables them to operate efficiently within global commerce
As stablecoins mature from speculative instruments into the sinew of global commerce, a quiet but consequential shift is underway: the question is no longer whether digital currencies exist, but whether the infrastructure exists to move them reliably across borders and regulatory boundaries. Solulu Tech, a New York-based company, announced on June 29 the expansion of a platform designed not to issue stablecoins, but to connect them — across blockchains, currencies, and jurisdictions — in the way that pipes connect water to the places it is needed. In positioning itself as neutral infrastructure rather than a champion of any single digital currency, Solulu is wagering that the future of finance will be plural, and that the most enduring role belongs to those who build the bridges between worlds.
- The real bottleneck in digital finance is no longer the existence of stablecoins — it is the absence of reliable infrastructure to move them across borders, convert them to local currency, and settle transactions in compliance with local law.
- Solulu Tech is expanding a platform that handles four interlocking functions: cross-chain liquidity movement, merchant payment processing, fiat conversion through licensed partners, and multi-jurisdictional settlement.
- Rather than backing a single stablecoin to win the market, Solulu is deliberately building neutral rails that can carry any regulated digital currency — a strategic posture that becomes more valuable as banks, payment networks, and governments each issue their own.
- Compliance automation is the unglamorous but decisive frontier: institutional players will not integrate stablecoins unless systems can automatically verify regulatory requirements across every jurisdiction in which they operate.
- As global regulatory frameworks continue to develop unevenly, infrastructure providers capable of navigating that patchwork simultaneously are emerging as the critical bridges between blockchain networks and the traditional financial system.
Solulu Tech, headquartered in New York, announced on June 29 that it is expanding its platform to move regulated stablecoins across multiple blockchain networks while connecting them to traditional financial systems. The company is not positioning itself as a stablecoin issuer — it is building the plumbing that allows different digital currencies to work together in global commerce.
The announcement reflects a broader maturation in how the financial industry views stablecoins. Once treated primarily as trading instruments within cryptocurrency markets, they are now being integrated into real business operations by banks and payment companies. The bottleneck has shifted: the challenge is no longer whether stablecoins exist, but whether infrastructure exists to move them reliably, convert them to regular currency, and settle transactions compliantly across borders.
Solulu's platform operates across four functions: connecting stablecoin issuers and moving liquidity between blockchains; processing payments for online and offline merchants; managing conversion between stablecoins and traditional currency through licensed partners; and handling multi-jurisdictional settlement simultaneously. Founder Shaun Muhammad described the company's strategy as a deliberate choice to remain neutral. 'Stablecoins are evolving from crypto trading instruments into financial infrastructure,' he said, arguing that the next stage of growth depends less on issuing new stablecoins and more on building the systems that allow existing ones to operate efficiently.
That neutrality is a calculated bet. If the future includes stablecoins issued by competing banks, payment networks, and governments, a company that can connect all of them — rather than promoting one — becomes essential. Solulu is also investing in compliance automation, the technical layer that allows institutional players to verify that transactions meet regulatory requirements in each jurisdiction they touch — a prerequisite for any serious adoption by banks or payment companies.
The company's long-term wager is that regulatory frameworks will develop unevenly across countries, creating a patchwork of rules that rewards infrastructure providers capable of navigating multiple jurisdictions at once. Solulu is expanding through regional operations and partnerships to position itself as that bridge between blockchain networks and the regulated financial system.
Solulu Tech, a New York-based infrastructure company, announced on June 29 that it is expanding its platform to move regulated stablecoins across multiple blockchain networks while connecting them to traditional financial systems. The company is positioning itself not as a stablecoin issuer, but as the plumbing that allows different digital currencies to work together in global commerce.
The shift reflects a broader maturation in how the financial industry views stablecoins. For years, they were treated primarily as trading instruments within cryptocurrency markets. Now, as banks and payment companies begin integrating them into real business operations, the bottleneck is no longer whether stablecoins exist—it's whether the infrastructure exists to move them reliably across borders, convert them to regular currency, and settle transactions compliantly. Solulu Tech is building that infrastructure.
The company's platform operates across four main functions. It handles the technical work of connecting different stablecoin issuers and moving liquidity between blockchain networks. It provides payment processing for both online and offline merchants. It manages the conversion between stablecoins and traditional currency through licensed financial partners. And it handles settlement—the final confirmation and recording of transactions—across multiple stablecoins and jurisdictions simultaneously.
Shaun Muhammad, Solulu's founder, framed the company's strategy around a deliberate choice: rather than betting on a single stablecoin to dominate global finance, Solulu is building neutral infrastructure that can support many. "Stablecoins are evolving from crypto trading instruments into financial infrastructure," Muhammad said. "The next stage of industry growth depends less on the issuance of new stablecoins and more on building the infrastructure that enables them to operate efficiently within global commerce." This positioning matters. If the future includes stablecoins issued by different banks, payment networks, and even governments, then a company that can connect all of them—rather than promoting one—becomes essential.
Industry observers have begun treating stablecoins as one of the fastest-growing segments of digital finance, particularly for cross-border payments, corporate treasury management, and automated settlement. The appeal is straightforward: a stablecoin pegged to the U.S. dollar or another currency moves instantly across borders without the delays and fees of traditional wire transfers. For companies managing money across multiple countries, that efficiency compounds.
Solulu Tech is also investing in what it calls compliance automation and interoperability improvements—technical work that sounds unglamorous but is essential for institutional adoption. A bank or payment company won't integrate stablecoins into its operations unless the system can automatically verify that transactions meet regulatory requirements in each jurisdiction where it operates. Solulu is building that layer.
The company's long-term bet is that regulatory frameworks will continue to develop globally, creating a patchwork of rules across different countries. In that environment, infrastructure providers that can navigate multiple jurisdictions simultaneously will become critical bridges between blockchain networks and the regulated financial system. Solulu Tech is headquartered in New York and is expanding through regional operations and partnerships to position itself for that role.
Notable Quotes
Stablecoins are evolving from crypto trading instruments into financial infrastructure. The next stage of industry growth depends less on the issuance of new stablecoins and more on building the infrastructure that enables them to operate efficiently within global commerce.— Shaun Muhammad, Founder of Solulu Tech
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does a stablecoin need infrastructure? Isn't the blockchain itself the infrastructure?
The blockchain moves the data, but it doesn't connect to banks or handle regulatory compliance. A stablecoin sitting on a blockchain is like a letter written in a language no bank can read. You need someone to translate it, verify it's legal, and actually settle it into a bank account.
So Solulu is the translator?
More like the translator and the customs officer combined. They move stablecoins between different blockchains, convert them to regular currency, and make sure each transaction complies with the rules in whatever country it's happening in.
Why does it matter that they support multiple stablecoins instead of just one?
Because the future probably won't have one winner. Banks will issue their own stablecoins. Governments might too. If you bet on a single one, you lose when another becomes dominant. But if you're neutral infrastructure that works with all of them, you're essential no matter what happens.
Is this actually being used, or is it still theoretical?
It's being built and deployed now. Financial institutions and fintech companies are already integrating stablecoins into their operations. The infrastructure is catching up to the demand. Solulu is one of several companies racing to be the one that makes it seamless.
What's the risk?
Regulation could move faster than they can adapt. A new rule in Europe or Asia could suddenly require different compliance layers. And if stablecoins themselves fall out of favor with regulators, the whole infrastructure becomes less valuable.