Nedbank Group has formed a strategic alliance with Crypto.com with a view to creating blockchain-based financial solutions which will be used to transform payments, settlements, and liquidity management in Africa. The partnership is a significant move towards aligning digital resources with the conventional banking resources in the region.
The project aims at establishing a regulatory blockchain-based payment system that has the potential to revolutionize the way individuals, companies, and financial organizations are able to make cross-border payments. Using the digital asset infrastructure provided by Crypto.com , Nedbank plans to offer more expedited and less expensive payment avenues with regulatory controls.
Addressing Africa’s Payment and Settlement Challenges
International payments in much of Africa are still based on legacy banking rails. These systems may result in high transaction rates, sluggish settlement, and currency risks. With the increased trade activity on the continent and the rest of the world, financial institutions are seeking options that will offer a more efficient settlement method.
Nedbank intends to overcome these shortcomings through this partnership by integrating its traditional banking services with blockchain technology. It is aimed at developing a stable payment platform that can support cross-border financial flows more transparently and at reduced costs of operation.
Real-Time Conversion Between Rand and Digital Dollars
One of the main characteristics of the initiative is the possibility to realize South African rand in digital dollars with the help of blockchain infrastructure. Clients will be able to smoothly replace ZAR with a stablecoin , the USD Coin, or USDC , which is popular on the worldwide markets of digital assets.
The feature will offer businesses with access to stable digital dollar liquidity to make trade payments, manage treasuries, and cross-border transfers. The system will enable the companies to settle transactions in near real time over secure digital channels.
Nedbank and Crypto.com will also carry out daily net settlement processes to provide transparency of operations and compliance with regulations. The structure is to be stable, yet capable of permitting the efficiency benefits of the blockchain-based settlement.
Serving Retail, SME and Corporate Clients
With the help of Crypto.com , individual customers will be introduced to the new system first and then slowly transitioned to small and medium-sized businesses and corporate clients. Both companies intend to launch the service gradually over the next year as they deal with regulators and financial organizations.
When completely adopted, the collaboration might enable firms that operate in Africa to deal with digital dollars without necessarily depending wholly on conventional international banking intermediaries. This may ease trade between African markets and the rest of the world.
Industry observers point out that simplified access to digital liquidity may be of special benefit to exporters, importers and other multinational firms dealing in more than one currency.
Supporting Africa’s Trade and Financial Integration With Crypto.com
Nedbank reports that the project is in line with overall continental objectives to enhance trade integration as part of the African Continental Free Trade Area. The bank plans to facilitate cross-border trade by creating blockchain-based payment systems, which would minimize its dependence on third-party settlement systems.
The platform will be interoperable with the existing banking systems and will allow traditional financial services to be compatible with the new digital capabilities. The project developers also lay stress on resiliency in the face of possible disruption of global payment networks.
Simon Marland, Managing Executive, Automation, Blockchain and Analytics, Nedbank, explained the project as a base of a more modern financial ecosystem in Africa. He highlighted that incorporation of the best financial technologies in the trade and commerce is essential to the future competitiveness of the continent.


