Slash integrates Bridge stablecoin rails

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Slash

Company Report
The system integrates stablecoin rails through partnerships with Bridge, allowing seamless conversion between USD, USDC, and USDT
Analyzed 7 sources

This turns Slash from a card led neobank into a dollar movement layer for businesses outside the U.S. Instead of waiting for bank hours, wire cutoffs, or local correspondent banks, a company can hold a USD balance, switch into USDC or USDT when it needs always on settlement, and switch back to fiat when it needs to pay vendors or operate from a bank account. Bridge is the plumbing that makes those currency and rail changes happen inside one workflow.

  • The practical value is speed and reach. Bridge is built to convert between fiat and stablecoins, including flows like USD to USDC and USD to USDT, and to give businesses bank like payment instructions alongside onchain transfers. That lets Slash offer one account that works for both bank payments and crypto treasury movement.
  • This fits Slash's core customer base. Slash already serves high risk, high velocity businesses and makes meaningful revenue from crypto off ramp fees, charging 0.5% for USDC and 0.6% for USDT conversions on more than $1B in annual crypto off ramp volume. Stablecoin rails are not a side feature, they are a monetized extension of the main product.
  • Compared with Mercury, which is stronger in startup banking and treasury, Slash is using stablecoin rails to win international and crypto native workflows that horizontal neobanks often treat as edge cases. The closest comparable is more like Kapital or other cross border SMB fintechs that mix banking software with dollar access and currency hedging.

The next step is for products like Global USD to become the default operating account for internationally exposed SMBs. As Bridge and Stripe expand stablecoin financial accounts and orchestration infrastructure, Slash can keep moving up from cards and checking into cross border treasury, supplier payments, and programmable money movement where traditional SMB banks are still slow and country bound.