Jun 25, 2026, 1:00 p.m.

2 min read

Uniswap logo on phone (appshunter.io/Unsplash)
Uniswap is working with Spark to build an FX system for stablecoins. (appshunter.io/Unsplash)

Summary

  • Spark and Uniswap are building a shared liquidity infrastructure for stablecoins.
  • The initiative starts with a $150 million liquidity migration supporting USDS, USDT and PYUSD.
  • The effort comes as banks, fintechs and payment firms increasingly explore issuing stablecoins.

Uniswap (UNI) and Spark are betting that as the number of stablecoins grow, the market will need the equivalent of a foreign-exchange network to move liquidity between issuers.

Spark, a decentralized-finance (DeFi) protocol focused on stablecoin liquidity, said Thursday it is working with decentralized exchange Uniswap to create what it calls an "FX layer" for stablecoins, a shared liquidity network designed to support a growing number of issuers.

The goal is to make it easier to move between stablecoins while allowing idle capital to earn yield until it's needed for trading, the companies said.

The move comes as stablecoins move beyond their crypto-native roots and increasingly become part of the cross-border payment network. That's been helped by lawmakers in the U.S. and elsewhere advancing regulatory frameworks encouraging fintechs, payment firms and banks to enter the market. The stablecoin market could grow from the current $300 billion to $4 trillion by 2030, global bank Citi projected.

Much as foreign-exchange markets connect fiat currencies, Spark is betting that stablecoins will eventually need a shared infrastructure to move efficiently between issuers. The company sees that liquidity layer — rather than the stablecoins themselves — as the next battleground in the sector's growth.

As a first step, Spark plans to migrate $150 million of liquidity to Uniswap v4, bringing together liquidity for Sky's USDS, Tether's USDT and PayPal's PYUSD. That list could grow as more companies want to issue their own stablecoins.

"The next generation of stablecoins won't be defined by who can issue another digital dollar," Spark CEO Sam MacPherson said in a statement. "It will be defined by the infrastructure that allows hundreds of issuers to operate together at global scale."

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Read full story at CoinDesk