Cyclops has raised $8m to build compliant stablecoin infrastructure for payment firms. Stablecoin infrastructure company Cyclops has secured $8m in fresh fundingCyclops has raised $8m to build compliant stablecoin infrastructure for payment firms. Stablecoin infrastructure company Cyclops has secured $8m in fresh funding

Cyclops raises $8m for enterprise stablecoin infrastructure

2026/03/04 22:56
3 min read
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Cyclops has raised $8m to build compliant stablecoin infrastructure for payment firms.

Summary
  • Cyclops closed an $8m funding round led by Castle Island Ventures, with participation from F-Prime and Shift4.
  • The startup will provide B2B infrastructure so payment processors and fintechs can issue and manage stablecoin products.
  • BTC traded around $71.7k and ETH near $2.1k, with majors up 7%–9% as stablecoin volumes on chains like SOL hit record highs.

Stablecoin infrastructure company Cyclops has secured $8m in fresh funding to expand its platform for enterprises that want to issue, manage, and integrate stablecoin products into their existing payments and banking stacks. The round was led by Castle Island Ventures, with participation from F-Prime and payment processor Shift4, underscoring how traditional fintech investors are positioning around regulated, dollar-linked assets rather than pure-speculation tokens. Cyclops aims to act as a middleware layer between banks, processors, and public blockchains, offering APIs for minting and redeeming stablecoins, managing reserves, and handling compliance workflows such as KYC and transaction monitoring. The company is targeting payment companies and fintechs that want to support on-chain settlement and tokenized balances without building their own infrastructure from scratch.

The raise comes as stablecoins continue to gain share in both trading and real-world payment activity. On networks such as Solana, monthly stablecoin trading volumes have hit new highs, supported by low fees and a shift from speculative meme trading toward SOL and stablecoin pairs, while Ethereum remains the dominant venue for larger stablecoin and tokenized-asset flows. For investors like Castle Island and Shift4, backing Cyclops is a bet that the next phase of growth will come from enterprise-grade adoption, where merchants and platforms move parts of their settlement and treasury stack onto public chains. In that model, infrastructure providers handle integration with blockchains and custody partners, while brands focus on user experience and regulatory engagement in their home markets.

Enterprise demand for stablecoin rails

Cyclops is entering a competitive but expanding field where payment firms, exchanges such as Coinbase, and networks like Visa are racing to support stablecoin settlement across multiple regions and currencies. For corporates and fintechs, key requirements include reliable issuance and redemption, clear segregation of reserves, and straightforward integration with existing ledgers and compliance systems. In practice, that means infrastructure providers must connect bank accounts, custodians, and public chains while maintaining audit trails that satisfy regulators and institutional risk teams. By focusing on B2B tooling, Cyclops is positioning itself as a behind-the-scenes provider rather than a consumer-facing brand, similar to how card processors and acquiring banks operate under the logos of retail-facing platforms.

The timing of the round reflects a broader shift in market structure. After a period of deleveraging and ETF-driven repositioning in Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), liquidity has rotated back into spot markets and stablecoins, with on-chain data showing increased usage for cross-border payments and micro-transactions. At the same time, policymakers in jurisdictions implementing frameworks like MiCA are clarifying capital, reserve, and disclosure rules for fiat-backed tokens, creating a clearer environment for banks and payment institutions to participate. For Cyclops and its backers, success will depend on convincing risk-averse enterprises that tokenized dollars can reduce friction and cost without adding unacceptable complexity or regulatory exposure, turning stablecoin rails from a niche experiment into a core part of global payments infrastructure.

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