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M&A announcement

Mar 17, 2026

Operator

Good morning. My name is Julianne, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Mastercard acquisition of BVNK conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. Please only press star one once to queue up for a question, as pressing star one multiple times may affect your position in the queue. If you would like to withdraw your question, press star one again. Thank you. Mr Devin Corr, Head of Investor Relations, you may begin your conference.

Devin Corr
Head of Investor Relations, Mastercard

Thank you, Julianne. Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us today for a call to discuss the details around our agreement to acquire BVNK, which we announced earlier this morning. With me today is Jorn Lambert, our Chief Product Officer. Following some comments from Jorn, the operator will announce the opportunity to get into the queue for a Q&A session. It is only then that the queue will open for questions. I would like to emphasise that the purpose of this call is to discuss our announced acquisition and how it fits into our overall strategy and to address any related questions you may have. We would ask that you limit your questions to these matters. Finally, I would like to remind everyone that today's call may include forward-looking statements regarding Mastercard's future performance. Actual performance could differ materially from these forward-looking statements.

Information about the factors that could affect future performance are summarized in our recent SEC filings. A replay of this call will be posted on our website for 30 days. With that, I will now turn the call over to our Chief Product Officer, Jorn Lambert.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Thank you, Devin. Hello, and thanks to all for joining us today. I'm very excited that today Mastercard announced a definitive agreement to acquire BVNK, a market leader in stablecoin payments, orchestration, and execution. BVNK operates B2B2C and enables businesses to send, receive, convert, and hold digital currency for payment use cases such as business payments, global payouts, P2P, and Me2Me. For decades, Mastercard has brought trust, ubiquity, and security to payments. As technology evolves, we expand consumer choice, and we innovate alongside our existing and new partners in the ecosystem to unlock value for their end customers. Digital currencies and tokenized deposits are no exception. This acquisition, once closed, will advance our digital currency strategy while opening up incremental opportunities.

The addition of BVNK to Mastercard network would bring more optionality and end-to-end capabilities to meet the needs of our customers and partners for the years ahead, all aligned with our current strategy and focus on driving long-term growth. Let's start with a bit of context. With increased regulatory clarity in multiple geographies, digital currencies, including stablecoins, have moved beyond their origins of crypto trading instruments. They are now a way to move value alongside established methods such as cards, bank transfers, and real-time payments. Stablecoins have actually existed for over 10 years, but we now see a marked step change in three areas: more use cases, more regulation, and more participation. First, the adoption of digital currencies has grown across different use cases such as B2B, global payouts, P2P, and Me2Me, or wallet funding.

Boston Consulting Group, for example, noted over 50% growth in stablecoin payments use cases in 2025, standing at over $350 billion. At a functional level, digital currencies offer distinct attributes. 24/7 availability, borderless transfers, programmability, immutability, speed. Put simply, they function as a globally accessible, borderless, real-time settlement system. It is another option to settle funds just like ACH is already today. Let's dive a little deeper in the use cases that can benefit from that function. On the B2B side, there are compelling use cases where speed, transparency, and predictability matter most. We see opportunities in cross-border B2B payments, especially for small and medium enterprises looking to optimize collections, cash flow, and treasury operations, reduce FX risks, and overall improve transaction speed and traceability. It's another way for businesses to move money with the right levels of trust and compliance.

Think of a flower exporter in Ecuador that needs to collect receivables from all across the world or the shipping company who needs to optimize liquidity across regions. We also see opportunities in global payout flows, such as payroll and payouts to gig workers, creators, and freelancers in dozens of countries. It's a fast-growing and complex operation that can be streamlined using stablecoin. Thirdly, P2P flows. This can be cross-border remittances, where stablecoin can offer another choice and can improve speed. Think of a worker in the U.S. who wants to send stablecoin each month to her parents in the Philippines. This can also include paying a friend locally who wants digital currency or what we call a Me2Me transaction, where I use fiat to fund a digital currency wallet.

For all these use cases, there is applicability in both domestic and cross-border environments. These areas alone have a massive addressable market. BVNK, combined with our network solutions like cards and Mastercard Move, become another tool to unlock that TAM. Beyond these opportunities right in front of us, though, new TAMs are emerging through use cases including account funding for buying and selling of tokenized assets, like tokenized treasuries or money market funds, for prediction markets, for crypto trading and DeFi, for store of value purposes, or even areas like treasury and liquidity management for businesses. We are in the very early innings of this space. To be clear, we do not see a change in how consumers pay for goods and services. Cards work exceptionally well.

Physical or mobile card credentials offer a frictionless and predictable user experience in-store and online, unparalleled worldwide acceptance and consumer reach, robust consumer protections, and very strong security and fraud protection. There is no consumer problem to be solved here. As a matter of fact, crypto and stablecoin wallet providers all over the world are equipping their customers with card credentials to give more utility to their wallets. Their customers benefit from a simple and secure experience anywhere in the world, and all participants benefit from the network. The second discontinuity or the second step change besides the growing use cases is that regulatory frameworks for stablecoins are rapidly developing, bringing greater clarity around issuing, custody, compliance, and consumer protections. This is giving the financial industry the confidence to participate directly.

We expect that in time, almost every financial institution in fintech will provide digital currency services to their customers, be it with stablecoins or tokenized deposits. Several FIs are already on that journey. Others are building stablecoin consortia. That is a game-changer for this industry. It also puts a strong light on rigorous compliance standards and practices. The third step change as more participants enter the market is that the level of fragmentation multiplies. Indeed, we see increasing issuing of stablecoins and tokenized deposits in multiple currencies across multiple chains through many intermediaries. We believe this complexity will only increase, and as a result, there will be increased need for trusted interoperability that seamlessly connects across fiat and tokenized systems, a role we play successfully in cards today. Businesses and consumers require a secure, compliant, and predictable user experience and instant conversion between currency formats and payment types.

In summary, increased participation, more use cases, developing regulation, and fragmentation are slowly moving digital currencies from the periphery of payments into more mainstream financial services. More and more, the evolution of the stablecoin ecosystem looks like landscapes Mastercard delivers unique value to, regulated, fragmented, and global ecosystems in need of connectivity and interoperability. This is core to what we already do in payments, and where our reach and acceptance positions us well to deliver value. Now, with that landscape set, let's talk specifically about BVNK. As I said earlier, BVNK is a stablecoin payments orchestrator that sits directly in the flow of funds, addressing multiple payment use cases. BVNK supports businesses and fintechs through four products: Send, Receive, Store, and Convert. Send is about paying suppliers, partners, employees, and customers in digital currencies from a fiat balance or separate digital currency balance.

Receive enables the receipt of payments in digital currencies from customers or partners. Store is the capability to hold funds in digital currency-linked accounts or wallets. Convert is about moving between currency or currency formats, be it fiat to stablecoin or stablecoin to stablecoin, or stablecoin to tokenized deposits using one platform. Convert and Store are naturally linked to Send and Receive. Through this solution set, BVNK abstracts the complexity of blockchain payments. They initiate, route, and settle payments. Its modern API-driven platform integrates easily in existing platforms across the ecosystem, enabling customers to access liquidity providers, stablecoin issuers, and multiple chains through a single connection without having to build or maintain this infrastructure themselves.

While Send, Receive, Store, and Convert may sound simple, delivering them at scale across multiple geographies is tremendously complex and often involves stitching together solutions from many players and connectivity with the financial institution. The way these products are set up makes them highly versatile to cater for existing and yet to emerge use cases. Crucially, BVNK embeds licensing, compliance, and regulatory tooling directly into its offering. The authorization to operate in key markets around the world is a unique competitive advantage. This allows customers to operate within regulatory frameworks without taking the associated operational and regulatory burden on themselves. Then finally, the licensing and the technical platform enables a wallet-as-a-service offering. Customers can begin offering stablecoin services without having to build or operate the underlying technical or regulatory infrastructure themselves.

By combining payment orchestration, compliance enablement, and wallet services, BVNK significantly reduces the time to market, an increasingly important advantage we see for banks and other regulated financial institutions. Let's talk a little bit about how it all comes together. The question is not whether stablecoin rails are better than fiat rails, but how both can be combined in a single offering and distributed at scale. Mastercard adds immediate global scale, rules, credibility, and distribution. We partner with tens of thousands of fintechs and financial institutions and provide the trust, reliability, and reach required to make digital currency-based solutions combined with existing payment methods a powerful proposition. Let's have a look at how BVNK and Mastercard plug in together. It's about payments, services, and settlement.

On payments, we plan to make it seamless to move from fiat to digital currencies and vice versa by connecting and vertically integrating the Mastercard and BVNK stacks. Senders and receivers do not need to switch to a new ecosystem or wonder what rails or instruments their counterparty supports. Think again about the flower exporter in Ecuador I mentioned earlier. When the flower shop pays by sending stablecoin, both parties have visibility on when the payment occurs, very different to today. The exporter has payment certainty and access to the funds immediately. We can help send, receive, as well as convert. The worker in the U.S. sending money to her parents in the Philippines. BVNK plus Mastercard could help her convert fiat U.S. dollar to stablecoin, move the funds quickly, and help her parents receive and convert from stablecoin to Philippine pesos.

Else, her parents could store it in a wallet that gets set up for future use, to which we link a card. Even if I live in New York and I want to pay a friend who only wants Tether for my share of our vacation rental, or I want to fund my own digital currency wallet to enable Polymarket or crypto trading. We can now offer that conversion from fiat U.S. dollar to the stablecoin and in the Me2Me example, allow you to hold the coin in order to facilitate the trade. Remember, these counterparties may want to use their existing provider on different chains with different stablecoins and different currencies. Our role as payment orchestrator is to enable this and move value seamlessly.

This will enable us to offer new services, including playing a new role in offering wallet-as-a-service to Mastercard customers, a low-lift way for them to enter this space. Obviously, the wallets would come with an embedded card. Over time, financial institutions may look for their own technology stacks on their own licensing. Also there, BVNK has a rich infrastructure services offering. Third, we will look to offer more settlement optionality, leveraging BVNK for our card settlement cycles, combining Mastercard's proven settlement processes and operating discipline with new stablecoin to fiat connectivity and faster settlement process. While most of the attention or headlines today is on stablecoins, we believe that tokenized deposits could play a significant role in the future, especially for our financial institutions.

We imagine stablecoins and tokenized deposits will coexist, and BVNK plus Mastercard is an orchestration player and network at scale that enables interoperability between these forms of tokenized currency. This will take time to develop. It is arguably even more nascent than stablecoin for pay-for payment, but we see it as a true growth opportunity and one that can scale. We will adapt and pivot as the landscape takes shape and morphs. This is a journey, and we are well-equipped with all the right tools. The strategic fit is clear, and the opportunity to continue to innovate in payments is exciting. Commercialization, however, is equally important. To that end, one of the biggest growth drivers in this business is simply volume. Digital currency volume, including stablecoins and tokenised deposits, that is converted, sent, and/or received.

There is value BVNK and Mastercard will be able to drive across all these areas, and we can monetize that, especially in a more fragmented world. On top of that, there are new opportunities, such as for our value-added services and solutions, including our safety and security solutions and more. Essentially, with BVNK, we add tools for our customers to address a large and growing secular TAM, as well as expand Mastercard's TAM. This spans B2B, global payouts, P2P, and Me2Me flows, and flows that were otherwise not addressable, like conversion between fiat and stablecoin, crypto trading, and transacting in tokenized real-world assets. All of this equates to incremental value for our customers, the global payments ecosystem, and for our investors. Now, this space is still in its early innings, and it will take a whole ecosystem to develop it.

This is why beyond this acquisition, we have brought together a vibrant network of partners in our crypto partner program, and we will continue to focus on empowering our customers and our partners to innovate and scale on an open network. We look forward to closing the transaction and bringing our technologies together to allow for seamless interoperability across digital assets and fiat currencies for our customers and their end consumers and businesses across the world. We continue to put Mastercard at the center of payments and add to our addressable market. We continue to innovate, enhance our capabilities, and offer choice to our customers, which allows us to serve them better so that we can all grow together over the long term. With that, I will pass the call back to Devin.

Devin Corr
Head of Investor Relations, Mastercard

Thank you, Jorn. Very clear. Julian, with that, you can please open the call for questions.

Operator

At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, please press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. Please only press star one once to queue up for a question, as pressing star one multiple times may affect your position in the queue. We'll pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from Sanjay Sakhrani from KBW. Please go ahead, your line is open.

Sanjay Sakhrani
Managing Director and Senior Analyst, KBW

Thank you. Good morning. Thank you, Jorn, for the summary. I guess just maybe a couple of questions from me. What was sort of the decision-making process to buy versus sort of build this capability, understanding that BVNK has made substantial progress in sort of consolidating a lot of the different currencies and such? Separately, I wanted to understand sort of what you guys would do with the store feature, because that would sort of get you closer to the consumer, correct? That's something that you guys have shied away from. Just trying to understand that. Thank you.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Thank you. Great questions. Clearly, for every new endeavor that we pursue, we are looking at build, partner or buy. In this specific case, this is a quite complex ecosystem with quite complex technology. BVNK has spent the last seven years building not just the technology, but also obtaining licenses in multiple geographies, developing the connectivity with liquidity players, with financial institutions, even with ACHs and global clearing platforms. For us, to build would actually require quite a bit of time. We felt that an acquisition in this case will bring us much faster to market and will enable us to serve our customers better. That's kind of what was essentially the rationale.

BVNK comes with a group of very, very talented people, with deep understanding and deep connectivity in that market. Again, I think it's very difficult for that to build organically, fast. On the second point, BVNK is a B2B2C business. They distribute, including the wallet as a service, via intermediaries. An example of that is, for example, Remitly, whereby when a consumer remits money from one side of the globe to another, Remitly would spin up a wallet for that receiver, and that is a technology provided by BVNK. It is not direct to the consumer, but via intermediaries. We expect that function, we would continue to distribute as well through banks, through fintechs and others.

Sanjay Sakhrani
Managing Director and Senior Analyst, KBW

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Ramsey El-Assal from Cantor Fitzgerald. Please go ahead, your line is open.

Ramsey El-Assal
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, Cantor Fitzgerald

Hi, good morning. Given the debate around stablecoin yield payments and the CLARITY Act, it seems like banks feel a little uneasy about stablecoins. I guess will BVNK and your overall stablecoin strategy provide banks with opportunities to participate in stablecoin economy or is there a risk of channel conflict?

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Our expectation. Firstly, we think of the space as digital currencies, not just stablecoins, meaning currencies that are made available on-chain to do on-chain operations. That can take the shape of a stablecoin, which is fully backed. That can take the shape of a tokenized deposit that is backed by the bank's balance sheet. The underlying technology to make that happen and the need to interoperate between the fiat world and the on-chain world is the same. We really believe that the market will evolve with the coexistence of these instruments and with our capabilities to be the oil in that machine, let's say. As far as the CLARITY Act is concerned, we'll see what pans out.

Regardless of the outcome of that, we expect that many banks will look to offer digital currency services to their consumers. Some will do that in the form of a stablecoin. Indeed, in the U.S., for example, you have multiple consortia of banks that are already looking to issue stablecoin. You have a number of banks that are already issuing stablecoin, and in some cases, it will be in the form of tokenized deposits. Again, we are a little bit indifferent to what the form is concerned. The evolution over time, over the next couple of years, towards more use cases for on-chain payments, we believe in strongly.

Ramsey El-Assal
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, Cantor Fitzgerald

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Bryan Bergin from TD Cowen. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Bryan Bergin
Managing Director, TD Cowen

Hey, guys. Good morning. Aside from the benefits of clearly the orchestration and the infrastructure layer that you talked about as a settlement rail, can you just talk more in detail about the incremental monetization opportunities this could allow for in your future portfolio on both the consumer and the commercial side? I'm curious, talk about where you think on the consumer side you might be able to start with incremental monetization activity sooner, and then where in the commercial portfolio, I'm thinking about treasury type use cases, where might you be most excited about there?

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

As I mentioned, BVNK has four products: Send, Receive, Convert, and Store. In any type of operation that we talk about, the on and off ramp or the conversion between one stablecoin to another, one or multiple of these products are being used. Whenever these products are being used, there is an opportunity to price for that. That's where we see the opportunity. It's a matter about which use cases will get more traction, which use cases are emerging. Today indeed, the use cases that have most traction today already is the payouts, the disbursements, paying a gig worker, paying a contractor.

BVNK, for example, partners with Deel in order for this, salary payouts. Remittances is a big one, and I mentioned Remitly as an example. Indeed, B2B collection or B2B, accounts payable and receivable. That one, I think we also believe, has significant upside as it provides, traceability, and speed, and affects certainty for, players to work with. In addition to that, as we will link those products within our Mastercard Move, we believe that we have an opportunity to move deeper into these kind of flows, including with FX. BVNK currently does not perform FX services, but that is clearly an opportunity for us to increase our monetization opportunity.

Operator

Our next question comes from Harshita Rawat from Bernstein. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Harshita Rawat
Senior Research Analyst, Bernstein

Hi. Good morning. Two quick ones. One, I think building upon, like, Ramsey's question, does this create channel conflict with some of your fintech peers, some of whom have made kind of similar acquisitions? Second, BVNK had a close partnership with one of your large network peers. How do you think about that? Thanks.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Yeah. Well, great question, Harshita. This market is in the very early innings. We believe that, like with the fiat market, you have many intermediaries. You have a large value chain, you have swim lanes within that value chain, and occasionally the swim lanes overlap, but it's not a zero-sum game. It's not because when they overlap, one loses, one doesn't. As a whole, we can lift the tide for all boats, and I think this is very much the case here in this space where there's so much still to discover, so much still to unpack and to grow.

I do think, whereas there might be areas whereby swim lanes overlap, I think by the by, we offer the platform for everybody to grow, everybody to innovate and to deliver value to the customers. That includes those who have made investments in some of that. We are partnering across many areas and we don't think that will change. You may have seen the last couple of months, whereby NYSE and other capital market players are moving to the digital asset space. Imagine the size of that market and all that will need interoperability between fiat and the digital asset space. I think the opportunity is still so vast and still so unknown that we don't worry too much about that.

I think we can grow all together. In terms of what was the second question? I think it was. Okay. Yeah.

Harshita Rawat
Senior Research Analyst, Bernstein

It was about the close partnership that BVNK has with one of your large peers.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Oh, yeah. Look, I mean, yes, they had a distribution agreement with Visa, and we don't know to what extent that will be continuing. It was a very small part of their overall picture, so it's not something that we worry too much about at this point.

Harshita Rawat
Senior Research Analyst, Bernstein

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Will Nance from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Will Nance
VP, Goldman Sachs

Hey, appreciate you taking the question. I wanted to ask maybe on some of the use cases that you outlined. Obviously, most of them focus on kind of new flow opportunities beyond consumer payments. H istorically, the company has talked about these kind of disparate pools of payments being incredibly large, but historically, they haven't been nearly as monetized as the consumer payment ecosystem. Like, one, I'm wondering if you could just speak to kind of monetization for the flows that BVNK looks at.

Maybe more importantly, when we think about all of those pools of payments, whether it's remittances, B2B, cross-border, how do you think about sizing, what percentage of some of these opportunities, stablecoin make sense for or is a better rail for relative to some of the traditional fiat rails that you and the industry have traditionally used to process these payments? Thank you.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Yeah. Firstly, you're absolutely right. We think of this as accelerating our ability to address the TAM of certain flows that we have already identified, like the cross-border remittances, the disbursements, the B2B payments. We think in these, especially in higher friction use cases where speed and traceability and convertibility is important, this gives us additional tools to go after those flows in addition to what we already have. I don't think it ends there. I think, like I mentioned, there's still emerging pockets of TAM and SAM that are very early but that we can see the first shoots of that may also be a quite meaningful addition to what we're looking at already today.

Will Nance
VP, Goldman Sachs

Got it. Appreciate it. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Andrew Schmidt from KeyBanc. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Andrew Schmidt
Managing Director and Head of FinTech Research, KeyBanc

Hey, Jorn. Hey, Devin. Thank you for taking the questions and congrats on this acquisition. Maybe just high level question on financial profile and monetization model. It just to get that out of the way. Just when you think about just folding this into the go-to-market effort, obviously BVNK has both FI and PSP focus. Maybe talk about just what you're going to emphasize and how you balance those constituents in the ecosystem. Thanks so much.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Yeah. I think we already kind of discussed the monetization model with their four products, with the opportunity to earn money every time that one of the four, multiple of the four is being used in any transaction. In addition to that, we would add our services, so our ability to get into FX, but also ability to apply the Mastercard Services. As you know, it's including the security services, the multilayer security services that we have. In terms of the second question.

Devin Corr
Head of Investor Relations, Mastercard

Can you repeat that again, Andrew?

Andrew Schmidt
Managing Director and Head of FinTech Research, KeyBanc

Sure, yeah. Just the go to market push across, how you fold this in terms of commercialization efforts across both PSPs and FIs. Thanks.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Great point. Increasingly BVNK has moved into servicing fintechs over the last couple of years. They initially started with some of the trading firms, but very much so it's now on the fintech side. We think that fintechs and financial institutions are where our growth is expected to come from. That is where we believe the scale opportunities lie. Over the next couple of years, as pretty much almost all the financial institutions will start moving into that space, and we want to be ready to support them. Fintechs probably early and then mainstream financial institutions are coming on board rapidly.

Andrew Schmidt
Managing Director and Head of FinTech Research, KeyBanc

Thank you very much.

Operator

Our next question comes from Timothy Chiodo from UBS. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Timothy Chiodo
Managing Director, UBS

Great. Thanks a lot. Also echo the comment that certainly has a new flows aspect or angle here, many of those use cases. You mentioned Mastercard Move. I was hoping you could talk a little bit about how those two will kind of come together, meaning the mechanics of overlaying Mastercard Move over some of the capabilities of BVNK.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Yeah. That is indeed a great point and a very kind of short-term opportunity in our view. Today, Move has billions of endpoints, and we can terminate Move moves that is originated in the U.S. in a bank account, let's say in the Philippines. What we can't do today is terminate that in a crypto wallet, in crypto assets or originate from a crypto wallet from crypto assets. By connecting Move and the BVNK infrastructure, we will be able to do that.

Any crypto wallet out there or any wallet out there with any stablecoin will be able to send these stablecoin, any type of stablecoin on any type of chain, and then terminate into any of the termination point that Move have or vice versa from any fiat rail into a crypto wallet. That is really a great initial opportunity. As I mentioned earlier, to us, this is not just about that. To us, this is about an ecosystem that will continue to evolve in a very fragmented way with dozens of chains, dozens, if not hundreds of coins in different currencies, with thousands of intermediaries that all have to interoperate.

That is exactly the kind of role that we wanna play, that we have been playing in the fiat world for decades. That's really where we see this, the scaling beyond perhaps the more tactical use cases.

Timothy Chiodo
Managing Director, UBS

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Jason Kupferberg from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Jason Kupferberg
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Wells Fargo

Good morning, guys. Thanks for all this commentary. Really interesting deal here. We've seen that, BVNK's volume run rate, I think, is now $25 billion+. Curious how fast that's growing, and just anything you can help us with in terms of rough revenue sizing or profitability of the business. Then maybe if you can just clarify, on the revenue model, is it nearly 100% of the revenues are transaction-based, or are there any license or SaaS-type fees in there? Thank you.

Devin Corr
Head of Investor Relations, Mastercard

Yeah, Jason, thanks for the question. I mean, right now the deal hasn't closed. We're pretty excited about the announcement, so we haven't disclosed any of those financial projections over time. O nce the deal closed and we get through all regulatory et cetera, we will look to disclose financials like we do any acquisitions over the next 12 months. Until then, we have not gone into those levels of detail. So more to come on that, over time. As far as, sorry, and as far as your question on the monetization, the same thing, we've gone to level of detail, but Jorn did touch on how predominantly this is volume-based, i.e., digital currency, stablecoin, et cetera. So based on conversion, send versus receive, et cetera.

Jason Kupferberg
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Wells Fargo

Great. Thanks.

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Bryan Keane from Citi. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Bryan Keane
Head of North America Payments Processors and IT Services Research, Citi

Yeah. Hi, good morning. Just wanted to follow up any details you can give us on the structure of the deal. Like, how did you think about valuation here? Was it based on volume or revenues? On the $300 million in contingent payments, is that volume , revenue or retention? Just any color on what those contingencies are. Thank you.

Devin Corr
Head of Investor Relations, Mastercard

Yeah, thanks, Brian. O bviously, we're not gonna send our acquisition model out externally. I think when you think about this, right, it's we look at the standalone on its own and most importantly, how we think about the synergies, right? As BVNK comes and couples with the overall Mastercard, how we bring this to our customers, how we really scale these solutions and even more than that, how this, the market becomes more fragmented, et cetera, as Jorn walked through. Obviously, for us, we really see a lot of value bringing these two assets together, more tools to our network, and that all plays into the financial projections as we think about the acquisition itself.

Bryan Keane
Head of North America Payments Processors and IT Services Research, Citi

Anything just on those contingent payments?

Devin Corr
Head of Investor Relations, Mastercard

Sorry, yeah. As I mentioned, the announced acquisition is around $1.8 billion, with around $300 million of contingent payments. Each deal is structured differently, and within that, there's going to be certain commitments we wanna deliver. O bviously, within that, it's Mastercard and BVNK working together, and we really see that long-term opportunity. We can't get into specifics, but it's about us continuing to deliver on the agreements we made.

Bryan Keane
Head of North America Payments Processors and IT Services Research, Citi

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from James Faucette from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

James Faucette
Managing Director, Morgan Stanley

Thank you very much. Wanted to ask what your sense is right now in terms of some of the regulatory questions, development and some of the use cases and how you are planning to help facilitate and move those forward in a lot of markets. I guess I'm thinking about cases where people are using stablecoins maybe that have some questions about whether that falls inside or outside things like capital flow controls. Just trying to think about how Mastercard can take advantage of its presence in that, its presence and relationships to move a lot of those regulations into the future. Thanks.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Yeah. I think it's a great point. I mean, this is an emerging space with emerging regulation and in some markets more mature than others. I think what we actually view as a competitive advantage for the space is a very high degree of compliance with both regulations and with AML and OFAC standards. It is a competitive advantage in the sense that we wanna serve banks, regulated banks that have a very high degree of scrutiny around that.

As we go to banks and as we demonstrate the fact that we are very close to regulation, that we are very compliant, and frankly BVNK itself has great tooling and great discipline around that, we think we can be the trusted partner for those banks. At the same time, like you said, as a partner that is present in all these countries, we can engage and are engaged with different regulators in order to to advance the agenda and bring greater regulatory clarity as a whole. This we find is a productive dialogue with many countries.

Operator

Our next question comes from Adam Frisch from Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Adam Frisch
Senior Managing Director, Evercore ISI

Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the question, and congrats on a really interesting deal. I think to date, and probably for the near future, the stacks and traditional payment rails like Mastercard, whether it's all different types of traditional rails and stablecoin, have been relatively distinct and separate. I'd love for you to dive in. You touched on this a little bit, but maybe get into a little bit more detail about how you see the two stacks maybe becoming more and more interoperable over time. Could we see a credit card transaction today eventually settle over stablecoin rails to facilitate faster, cheaper back-end? Could that ignite kinda additional services for you guys over time? I'd love for you to address that aspect of it in a little bit more detail.

Do you think this deal kinda mitigates some of the concern that some people may have that Mastercard is gonna be disintermediated by the stablecoin ecosystem in the future? Thank you.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Yeah. Great question. Thank you for that. You're right. The two have been viewed as quite separate, and the reason for that is because the card rail or the card network is essentially a messaging network or a front end, a UX, whereby consumers get a card or a digital credential, a merchant has got a terminal or virtual terminal, and that facilitates the exchange of information, credential information, payload information between two parties. Once that exchange of information has been done, then you need to settle. Today, the card network settles on fiat rails, on ACH rails, and that is why sometimes that takes a little while.

If you do a cross-border transfer, you need to settle in two different countries and need to use correspondent rails in order to move the funds. Settlement happens one or two days after the messaging layer, after the card transaction has happened. Where the two can come together is where we can say, actually, with stablecoins, we can accelerate that settlement. We can actually move money much faster. The messaging layer doesn't change. The consumer and the merchant still need to interact with each other through a UX, still need to have rules of the road in order to provide protections. We still need the reach and the highly standardized way in which these two players interact. But you can actually move the funds faster by plugging in stablecoin from the back. We started doing this, actually.

We already have a number of stablecoin currencies enabled in the network. We've already moving funds, and that obviously reduces trapped liquidity, that reduces the collateral requirements that customers have. We see significant benefits to accelerate settlements even for the card network. Where the misnomer often goes is that it actually doesn't impact the messaging layer between consumers and merchants, and that's why we remain really quite confident about this being a net additive deal for the network and not a replacement.

Devin Corr
Head of Investor Relations, Mastercard

I think we're out of time, but maybe we can squeeze in one last question.

Operator

Our last question will come from Craig Maurer from FT Partners. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Craig Maurer
Managing Director, FT Partners

Yeah, hi. Thanks for the question. I was wondering if there are any additional capabilities that Mastercard might need to add to support this ecosystem over time, whether that's a stronger digital identity capability or something else that would be needed by the ecosystem to create confidence in the transaction. Thanks.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Yeah. Look, what we've been very thoughtful about, this acquisition, kind of both in terms of timing and in terms of the capabilities that we felt we need at this point in order to take full advantage of the step change in this space. Does that mean that we have all assets? Does that mean that we will never need something else? Obviously not. We will continue to look to build, to partner, and potentially to buy, as we feel other gaps still exist. Once we close, I do believe the capabilities of BVNK and the talent that is there, that will help us develop new capabilities is really quite impressive and will allow us to take great strides in this space.

Devin Corr
Head of Investor Relations, Mastercard

That's a perfect way to end. Thank you. Thank you, Jorn. Thank you, everyone. Please reach out if there's any further questions.

Jorn Lambert
Chief Product Officer, Mastercard

Thank you.

Operator

This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.

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