LaFinteca’s new authorization in Brazil reflects a strategy of building innovation on regulatory foundations, not shortcuts.
Latin America is often celebrated as a payments laboratory. Brazil’s Pix moves more than $1 trillion a year, Peru is standardizing QR payments, and Mexico’s SPEI has become everyday infrastructure. On the surface, it looks like pure tech adoption. But beneath that growth lies a less glamorous, more decisive factor: regulation.
At LaFinteca, we’ve just added a new license to our regulatory footprint. The Central Bank of Brazil has authorized us as an Instituição de Pagamento (Electronic Money Institution) — a license that puts us under direct regulatory supervision in the country. For us, this is not only a compliance milestone. It’s the foundation for building a payment ecosystem that merchants and consumers can trust for the long haul.
Operating without oversight might look faster in the short term. In reality, it creates fragility: opaque onboarding, patchy settlement, and exposure to regulatory intervention. Licensing flips that script. It forces infrastructure to be transparent, auditable, and built for scale.
In Brazil, where more than 140 million people use digital payments, that level of trust isn’t optional. It’s a precondition for growth.
Our approach is simple: compliance first, product second. By aligning with Brazil’s EMI framework, we are able to integrate directly with Pix and move forward with the next steps required for wallet infrastructure, merchant settlement, and API development — all under the guardrails of one of the most respected regulators in the region.
It’s not the fastest route on paper, but it’s the most sustainable one in practice.
For businesses looking to enter LATAM, licensing translates into clarity:
Regulation doesn’t make the headlines the way flashy product launches do. Yet it’s the reason those products can endure. For LaFinteca, Brazil’s new EMI license is not the finish line — it’s the platform from which the next phase of secure, scalable, cross-border payments in LATAM will be built.
LaFinteca is a Barcelona- and São Paulo-based payment institution building seamless financial infrastructure for Latin America. Through a single integration, LaFinteca enables merchants to access local payment rails while ensuring compliance with national regulations. Our mission is to simplify payments, accelerate cross-border trade, and expand financial inclusion across the region.
👉 Learn more at la-finteca.com and follow us on LinkedIn.
\n



Wormhole’s native token has had a tough time since launch, debuting at $1.66 before dropping significantly despite the general crypto market’s bull cycle. Wormhole, an interoperability protocol facilitating asset transfers between blockchains, announced updated tokenomics to its native Wormhole (W) token, including a token reserve and more yield for stakers. The changes could affect the protocol’s governance, as staked Wormhole tokens allocate voting power to delegates.According to a Wednesday announcement, three main changes are coming to the Wormhole token: a W reserve funded with protocol fees and revenue, a 4% base yield for staking with higher rewards for active ecosystem participants, and a change from bulk unlocks to biweekly unlocks.“The goal of Wormhole Contributors is to significantly expand the asset transfer and messaging volume that Wormhole facilitates over the next 1-2 years,” the protocol said. According to Wormhole, more tokens will be locked as adoption takes place and revenue filters back to the company.Read more