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Coinme Acquired by Polygon Labs to Build its Open Money Stack
Coinme Acquired by Polygon Labs to Build its Open Money Stack

Transaction Overview
On January 13th, 2026, Polygon Labs announced it intends to acquire Coinme, a regulated crypto-as-a-service provider. Simultaneously, Polygon also announced the acquisition of Sequence, enabling payment flows across blockchain networks. Both acquisitions help build a fully integrated, rules-compliant stablecoin payments system – Poygon’s Open Money Stack.

Target: Coinme
Founded in 2014 and headquartered in Seattle, Coinme is a U.S.-regulated digital asset payments company offering crypto-as-a-service and stablecoin and crypto payment infrastructure for enterprises, fintechs, wallets, and payment applications.

Coinme is licensed and operates in 48 U.S. states, as well as Puerto Rico, and has built systems designed to handle fiat-to-crypto and stablecoin payments at scale while meeting U.S. regulatory requirements.

Coinme provides capabilities that partners integrate into their products. These capabilities, delivered as a set of APIs or SDKs, include KYC, payments by debit card, bank transfer, or cash, converting between fiat and crypto, trading, and custody, so partners can offer end-to-end crypto and stablecoin features embedded in their own applications.

Coinme also supports a large cash-to-crypto network through partnerships, providing the software and compliance layer that enables cash on-ramps and off-ramps at 50,000+ locations across the U.S.

Coinme serves more than one million users and has processed more than $1.3 billion in total transactions since it launched. Its enterprise customers include Coinstar, Exodus, Mercuryo, Baanx, and Breeze.

Coinme was co-founded by CEO Neil Bergquist and has raised $41M in equity funding from Pantera, Digital Currency Group, Coinstar, Circle, and MoneyGram.

Coinme competitors include: ZeroHash, MoonPay, Bridge | Stripe, Banxa | OSL, and Paxos.

Buyer: Polygon Labs
Polygon was founded in 2017 as Matic Network and is actively undergoing an evolution in its product offering. Polygon Labs, formed in 2023, is responsible for supporting the development of the Polygon ecosystem, with a focus on fast, low-cost blockchain infrastructure for payments.

Polygon is now building the Open Money Stack, an integrated set of services designed to move money instantly and reliably, globally. It combines blockchain settlement on the Polygon network with core payment components like wallets, stablecoin integrations, cross-chain connectivity, and compliance tooling, to keep funds on-chain so they can be used across on-chain financial applications.

To make this work across many different blockchains, Polygon Labs is building AggLayer, a settlement layer meant to help different blockchains connect and exchange value with each other quickly and at low cost, reducing the need for separate, disconnected systems.

Polygon is a listed token with a current fully diluted value of $1.6B. Polygonscan shows more than 6.2 billion total transactions on Polygon. Polygon’s website also points to scale indicators like billions of dollars of stablecoins on the network, millions of transactions per day on average, and monthly payment volume, and describes Polygon as infrastructure that can support “trillions” of value moving through it.

The company was co-founded by Jaynti Kanani, Sandeep Nailwal, Mihailo Bjelic, and Anurag Arjun, and is currently led by CEO Marc Boiron, who was appointed in 2023.

Historically, in 2021, Polygon acquired zero-knowledge cryptography companies Mir and Hermez for $400M and $250M, respectively, but these are no longer aligned with the company’s Open Money Stack vision.

Transaction Parameters
Polygon Labs is acquiring Coinme for an undisclosed amount. In combination with another acquisition, Sequence, simultaneously announced by Polygon today. The combined acquisition value is around $250M. This marks one of the first examples of a protocol acquiring an operating business. The Coinme transaction is expected to close in Q2 2026.

Architect Partners served as the exclusive financial advisor to Coinme.

Notable comparable transactions include OSL | Banxa for $62M (M&A Alert), Nuvei | Simplex for $250M (M&A Alert), Ripple | Rail for $200M (M&A Alert), Stripe | Bridge for $1.1B (M&A Alert), MoonPay | Iron for $100M (M&A Alert), and MoonPay | Helio for $175M (M&A Alert).

Strategic Rationale
Polygon is acquiring Coinme and Sequence to move from being a settlement rail to owning the full experience of how money comes on-chain, moves on-chain, and settles back into the real world. The combination of Coinme’s licensed payments offering with Sequence’s wallet and payments orchestration stack gives Polygon an end‑to‑end, regulated crypto payments platform that spans physical kiosks, embedded wallets, and cross‑chain routing.

On Day 1, Polygon can take this integrated “crypto‑as‑a‑service” solution to banks, PSPs, neobanks, and fintechs who want compliant, turnkey stablecoin and token payments without building their own licensing, infrastructure, or user experience.

Architect Partners’ Observations
This acquisition(s) underscores a broader inflection point in the blockchain protocol market: technological performance and scalability alone will not win. The integration of real-world rails and the ability to deliver end-to-end value for mainstream users are becoming table stakes. As the market matures, competitive advantage is shifting toward owning the commercialization layer, including regulated fiat access, compliance operations, distribution channels, partner integrations, and strong product integration.

Networks that rely entirely on third-party providers risk commoditization, margin leakage, inconsistent user experience, and strategic dependency, just as stablecoins and tokenized products begin to drive meaningful transaction volume and the corresponding revenue opportunities.
Polygon’s actions show they fully understand the importance of this approach.

Sources
Polygon Press Release
Architect Partner M&A Tracker
PitchBook

Insights

Private Financing Snapshot (Week of May 18 – May 24)

Steve Payne
May 27, 2026
DOWNLOAD FULL REPORT

May 18 – May 24 (Published May 21st)

PERSPECTIVES by Steve Payne

 

20 Crypto Private Financings Raised: $571M 

Rolling 3-Month-Average: $270M 

Rolling 52-Week Average: $411M 

Deals Over $50M: 3

 

Tokyo-based JPYC, the first domestic funds-transfer provider to issue a yen-backed stablecoin under Japan’s regulatory framework, has completed a Series B totaling roughly ¥5 billion (~$33M). The round brought in a mix of traditional financial and corporate Japan, including Life Design Fund, IHD Strategy Fund, Awagin Future Creation Fund, Meiji Yasuda Future Co-Creation Fund, and Sumitomo Life’s Sumisei Innovation Fund, alongside digital-asset-adjacent names like bitFlyer Holdings and Metaplanet. JPYC began issuing in October 2025 after receiving funds-transfer registration in August and has since opened 18,000 accounts, reached over ¥2.5 billion in cumulative issuance, and processed more than ¥35 billion in transaction volume. That is a real early lead, but not yet a durable moat: the same regulatory clarity that enabled JPYC’s launch is now drawing in banks, corporates, and regional stablecoin players.

 

Japan underpins the market story behind the deal. The FSA-backed Payment Innovation Project includes a megabank stablecoin joint-issuance pilot involving MUFG Bank, SMBC, Mizuho, Mitsubishi Corporation, Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking, and Progmat, plus a separate tokenized-deposit and interbank-settlement track involving DeCurret DCP, GMO Aozora Net Bank, and ABeam Consulting. New FSA rules effective June 1, 2026 also create a legal path for qualifying foreign trust-type stablecoins to be treated as electronic payment instruments under the Payment Services Act. JPYC is positioning for that more open environment, with LINE NEXT’s Unifi wallet integration announced on May 22, JPYC issuance on Kaia beginning earlier in May, and Circle positioning JPYC within its Partner Stablecoin and StableFX framework alongside USDC and EURC. JPYC has a first-mover advantage, but its regulatory lead could narrow once the June 1 rules take effect and qualified foreign issuers secure domestic access.

 

JPYC is not alone in the regional buildout. Singapore-based Startale Group (which also has strong Japanese roots) closed a $63 million Series A backed by SBI and Sony Innovation Fund in March 2026 to scale Strium and JPYSC, while Hong Kong-based RedotPay raised $107 million in December 2025 to extend stablecoin payments across 100+ markets. The competitive set spans institutional rails, cross-border consumer payments, and onshore regulated issuance.