Traditional financial giants are embracing Web3. In mid-December, the leading US financial software company Intuit (market cap of $180 billion, over 100 million users) reached a multi-year strategic partnership with Circle, planning to integrate stablecoin functionality into its flagship products such as TurboTax, QuickBooks, and Credit Karma. These three applications dominate the compliant settlement space, covering the entire chain of tax, financial management, and credit management.
There's a detail worth pondering—true competition among stablecoins isn't about which exchange supports them or how deep the liquidity is. Ultimately, whoever can be the first to connect financial infrastructure and make stablecoins a native tool for everyday payments and financial settlements will hold the discourse power. Traditional finance is entering the scene, and the rules of the game are quietly changing.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
23 Likes
Reward
23
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
DaisyUnicorn
· 2025-12-20 15:00
Really? Intuit's move to focus directly on payment infrastructure is much smarter than just trading coins on exchanges.
View OriginalReply0
MrDecoder
· 2025-12-19 21:14
Wow, this is the real deal, the exchange's way is all just fake.
View OriginalReply0
WalletDetective
· 2025-12-19 11:54
Wow, Intuit's move is really aggressive, directly targeting the tax sector... Now stablecoins are really about to become a necessity of life.
View OriginalReply0
CryingOldWallet
· 2025-12-19 11:44
Wow, Intuit is really going to launch a stablecoin this time, and it's different this time
The involvement of traditional financial giants is truly different; infrastructure is indeed the key
Honestly, all the vanity of exchanges is pointless; in the end, it’s about who can integrate into users’ daily lives
Over 100 million users directly integrated stablecoins, this move is quite aggressive
By the way, will this really change the game? Feels like I've seen too many "game changers" before
When it comes to stablecoins, it ultimately depends on whether they can truly replace the US dollar for everyday transactions
View OriginalReply0
ruggedSoBadLMAO
· 2025-12-19 11:44
Relying on this move with intuit was a bit aggressive. If it really gets integrated, stablecoins will completely become everyday tools.
View OriginalReply0
SmartContractPlumber
· 2025-12-19 11:27
This is the real killer move. It's not about the liquidity on the exchange, but directly blocking at the settlement infrastructure level—who controls the last mile of financial management wins. Intuit's move is ruthless.
Traditional financial giants are embracing Web3. In mid-December, the leading US financial software company Intuit (market cap of $180 billion, over 100 million users) reached a multi-year strategic partnership with Circle, planning to integrate stablecoin functionality into its flagship products such as TurboTax, QuickBooks, and Credit Karma. These three applications dominate the compliant settlement space, covering the entire chain of tax, financial management, and credit management.
There's a detail worth pondering—true competition among stablecoins isn't about which exchange supports them or how deep the liquidity is. Ultimately, whoever can be the first to connect financial infrastructure and make stablecoins a native tool for everyday payments and financial settlements will hold the discourse power. Traditional finance is entering the scene, and the rules of the game are quietly changing.