If your business touches cryptocurrency — whether you pay contractors in USDT, hold ETH on the balance sheet, or invoice clients in stablecoins — you need a bookkeeping process that captures every transaction accurately.
USDT (Tether) is the most widely used stablecoin in the world, with a market cap exceeding $140 billion and daily transfer volume in the tens of billions.
Managing digital assets on a spreadsheet worked when your company held a little Bitcoin. Now that stablecoins process over one trillion dollars a month and regulators are tightening reporting rules, businesses need a proper crypto accounting system — or risk costly mistakes at tax time.
The question of whether crypto is a security or a commodity has haunted the industry for years. Under the previous SEC leadership, enforcement-by-litigation was the default — companies found out they were non-compliant when they received a lawsuit.
Web3 payroll is one of the most complex operational challenges facing decentralized organizations. DAOs, DeFi protocols, and blockchain startups operate natively in crypto, but paying contributors who may span 30+ countries remains a major hurdle.
If you manage a team of international contractors, you've probably felt the pain of wire transfers — high fees, slow settlement, and currency conversion markups that eat into every payment.
The global iGaming industry crossed $125 billion in 2026, and crypto payment solutions for iGaming operators have become one of the fastest-growing segments in digital payments.
You're a startup with a 12-person team spread across four countries. Your lead developer is in Portugal, your designer is in Nigeria, your marketing lead is in Argentina, and your co-founder is in Singapore.
Paying international contractors shouldn't cost $43 per transfer and take five business days to land. Yet for thousands of companies with distributed teams, that's still the reality of cross-border wire transfers.