Why Fintech Move to Crypto After an IPO: Klarna
Educational material and not financial or legal advice.
In November 2025, Klarna announced the launch of KlarnaUSD—a payment stablecoin aimed at lowering the cost of international settlement, partly by relying less on traditional cross-border intermediaries.
That wording matters. This is not about trading. It’s about the payments market and its margins.
Here’s what could actually change for banks and merchants in 2026—and why fintechs (especially post-IPO) keep showing up with “payment tokens”.
What We Know about KlarnaUSD
Klarna launched KlarnaUSD on a blockchain platform built by Stripe and plans to use the token for international payments, positioning it as a way to reduce costs.
The token is built on Tempo—a blockchain associated with Stripe and Paradigm. The product is in a testing phase and is designed around cheaper cross-border settlement.
Klarna went public in September 2025 at a valuation of about $17.31B. Being public usually increases pressure to improve unit economics: fees, payment costs, and working-capital speed.
Why a Fintech Issues Its Own Stablecoin when USDC Exists
1) Control over the internal payment rail
A fintech has to move liquidity between entities, banks, payment partners, and regions. If part of that becomes internal settlement via a token, the process can be faster and, in some corridors, cheaper.
2) Cross-border economics are layered
Cross-border isn’t one fee. It’s FX, intermediary charges, delays, refunds, and compliance costs. A stablecoin can remove some friction, but it doesn’t remove the whole stack. That’s why KlarnaUSD is framed as lowering the total cost of international transfers—not as “free payments”.
3) A merchant-facing product
If a fintech can offer merchants “faster settlement” or “cheaper settlement” (even only in specific corridors), that becomes a competitive lever. It can lead to new pricing models: faster payouts, better conversion, or different acquiring bundles.
What This Changes for Banks and Merchants in 2026
For banks
- Part of settlement starts living in a parallel rail. Banks don’t disappear from the chain, but it becomes harder to keep margin on every step.
- Compliance gets tighter in practice. If payments move more often and faster, banks need clearer explanations of source of funds and flow logic—otherwise they respond by cutting limits.
For merchants
- Faster access to funds in certain scenarios, especially cross-border.
- Fees don’t vanish. They shift. You may reduce some banking layers, but you still have provider fees, FX, risk pricing, compliance overhead, and sometimes on-chain costs.
Where the Hard Part Remains: Regulation and Compliance
In the EU, you can’t discuss stablecoins in 2026 without MiCA. MiCAR sets the framework for asset-referenced tokens (ART) and e-money tokens (EMT) and raises the bar for issuing and operating these products.
In practice:
- KYC/AML and source-of-funds checks remain part of the system.
- Transaction history needs to be readable: where funds came from, why they moved, where they went.
- A “payment stablecoin” is not “anonymous money”. It’s a faster rail inside a regulated perimeter.
Conclusion
KlarnaUSD is a clean marker of 2026: a mainstream fintech showing that stablecoins can be part of payment infrastructure, not just a crypto feature for enthusiasts.
For the market, the direction is straightforward: speed and cost of settlement become a real competitive battlefield, while compliance and a transparent payment trail become non-optional.
If you operate cross-border—or simply want a reserve for payments—it’s practical to keep part of your liquidity in fixed-income products so it doesn’t sit idle. In the Hexn ecosystem, HODL can play that role: deposits with weekly payouts and up to 20% APY.