Western Union and Papaya Global Move Treasury Operations to Solana (SOL)
Darius Baruo Mar 17, 2026 20:51
Major enterprises adopt Solana (SOL) for corporate treasury as Fireblocks reports $400B monthly stablecoin volume. Western Union goes exclusive on SOL.
Western Union has chosen Solana (SOL) exclusively for its on-chain treasury initiatives, joining a growing wave of enterprises abandoning traditional banking rails for blockchain-based liquidity management. The payments giant revealed its strategy during a Solana Foundation webinar this week, alongside Papaya Global's announcement that it now processes global payroll directly in stablecoins through the network.
The institutional adoption comes as Fireblocks reports stablecoins now comprise nearly half of the $400 billion flowing through its platform monthly—a figure that underscores how quickly corporate treasuries are shifting on-chain.
The Numbers Driving Corporate Migration
Maya Caddle, Payments Lead at Solana Foundation, pointed to hard metrics: Solana processes more daily transactions than all other major blockchains combined, with median fees at fractions of a cent and sub-second confirmations. For treasurers managing global payroll or cross-border settlements, those economics matter.
Richard Astle, VP of Network at Fireblocks, noted the custody platform has now secured over $10 trillion in cumulative transfers. That institutional track record appears to be unlocking corporate comfort with on-chain treasury.
SOL currently trades at $94.57, relatively flat over 24 hours despite Galaxy Digital CEO Mike Novogratz declaring last week that crypto is entering the "season of Solana."
What Traditional Treasury Actually Costs
The webinar laid out the hidden friction enterprises face with legacy systems: capital trapped in pre-funded local accounts for weekends and holidays, multiple correspondent banks adding FX markups, and the operational burden of managing hundreds of separate bank accounts globally just to maintain local liquidity.
Western Union and Papaya Global are replacing this fragmentation with single institutional wallets enabling just-in-time liquidity. A New York headquarters can now move funds to a Brazilian subsidiary instantly, 24/7, without capital sitting idle.
Non-financial corporates in energy, shipping, and commodities are reportedly settling multi-billion dollar transactions through the same infrastructure, particularly in emerging markets where traditional payments frequently get stuck.
Institutional Infrastructure Now Available
The enterprise toolkit has matured considerably. Fireblocks provides custody with governance workflows. Solana's Token Extensions enable programmatic compliance—confidential balances, required memos, and transfer logic built at the protocol level. For institutions requiring full operational sovereignty, Solana Contra offers private permissioned instances connected to the broader ecosystem.
Yield generation has also evolved. BlackRock and Franklin Templeton now offer tokenized funds on Solana, allowing treasurers to earn returns on idle stablecoin balances rather than letting capital sit dormant.
This follows Citigroup's completion of a full tokenized Bill of Exchange lifecycle on Solana in February, handling issuance through settlement alongside PwC.
Timeline to Production
Perhaps the most significant shift: deployment timelines have compressed from years to weeks. The modular architecture means enterprises can prototype and scale without building from scratch.
For corporate treasurers still operating on T+2 settlement cycles and banking hours, the question is becoming less "if" and more "when" their competitors move first.
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