
If Stripe owns PayPal, Bridge becomes the shared infrastructure layer under PYUSD, OpenUSD and Tempo. That’s infrastructure consolidation, not token competition, and it’s a much bigger deal than the acquisition headline suggests.”
That sort of infrastructure scale could allow Stripe to introduce lower settlement fees and checkout incentives for PYUSD, while Tempo could gradually steer users toward OUSD.
“This potentially strengthens Tempo considerably,” said Niamh Byrne, chief commercial officer at blockchain developer platform Alchemy. “If OpenUSD gains meaningful traction, it could increase the strategic importance of Tempo and position it as more than another blockchain.”
However, even if Stripe does combine multiple prominent stablecoin projects under one roof, commentators do not foresee major disruption to the stablecoin sector in the immediate future.
“Circle’s cross-chain interoperability is operationally proven at institutional scale, whereas Tempo is an unproven layer-1 still in early development,” Citi said in its note. “It is our understanding that Bridge/Tempo relies on third parties for interoperability capabilities.”
Tether’s USDT, meanwhile, holds a 60% share of the stablecoin market, dwarfing even USDC, let alone PYUSD, which is in itself something of a “mic drop” to suggestions of a threat from distant competitors. Notwithstanding that, USDT derives its prominence from the retail sector and emerging markets rather than institutions and corporates.


