Nathan Best is Chief Revenue Officer for money movement platform Equals. Here he explains how it’s […] The post EXCLUSIVE: “Simplifying Complexity in Global MoneyNathan Best is Chief Revenue Officer for money movement platform Equals. Here he explains how it’s […] The post EXCLUSIVE: “Simplifying Complexity in Global Money

EXCLUSIVE: “Simplifying Complexity in Global Money” – Nathan Best, Equals in ‘The Fintech Magazine’

2026/06/04 17:00
Okuma süresi: 7 dk
Bu içerikle ilgili geri bildirim veya endişeleriniz için lütfen crypto.news@mexc.com üzerinden bizimle iletişime geçin.

Nathan Best is Chief Revenue Officer for money movement platform Equals. Here he explains how it’s addressing the gap between expectation and reality when it comes to embedding global payments

THE FINTECH MAGAZINE: For readers discovering Equals for the first time, how do you describe the company’s mission and the operational finance challenges it was built to solve for global businesses?
NATHAN BEST: We are a next-generation global money movement platform. Our mission is simple: solve operational complexity for exceptional businesses operating across multiple markets, currencies, and regulatory environments. We build and own the technology infrastructure that businesses use to power their payments, accounts, cards and FX, and to build and operate embedded payment services for their customers.

What differentiates us is that we combine our 18-plus years of trusted technology innovation with real operational expertise. Our customers are looking for more than the off-the-rack service model of the high-volume fintech players, but they are often too complex or small to be supported by banks, as discovered in our recently commissioned research with Visa Consulting & Analytics.

Equals solves payment challenges and reduces regulatory complexity for those clients. That’s especially important for businesses operating in sectors or geographies that require more flexibility, oversight or specialist servicing.

TFM: Businesses are increasingly looking to embed financial capabilities directly into their own platforms and operations. How is demand for embedded payments evolving?

NB: Many organisations still manage fragmented provider relationships that hinder the full potential of embedded payments. Revenue and profit can be compromised through inconsistent payment experiences, slow settlements, reconciliation challenges, and growing currency exposure.

We built Equals to solve these challenges through a single connection, combining international payments, accounts, cards and FX infrastructure. Our products are used by businesses in their own operations, as well as to deliver embedded payments services to their customers. We design from the customer’s perspective. Many clients begin with white-label services before evolving towards embedded APIs and fully integrated financial services as their business grows.

TFM: Are businesses facing any barriers to embedded finance adoption?

NB: Businesses are struggling to find the operational and compliance support they need from traditional banks, larger providers or smaller fintechs. The industry has focussed heavily on technology alone and neglected the operational capability needed to manage complexity and deliver embedded payments successfully. Clients want a strategic partnership from their technology providers. Our flexible technology and service model enable us to deliver tailored onboarding, compliance, and payment solutions.

Because we own and build the infrastructure ourselves, we can adapt services around each client’s operational requirements rather than forcing businesses into rigid provider frameworks.

TFM: Your customers are fast-growing digital businesses and large corporates with complex treasury and payments needs. Clients also deploy your technology to power embedded payments services to their own customers. What patterns do you see across different segments?

NB: Fast-growing businesses typically focus on automation, flexibility, and speed to market, while larger corporates prioritise governance, treasury visibility, and operational resilience. Security and compliance remain mission-critical at every stage. White-label services work well for our earlier stage fintech and banking clients, in particular, who can quickly launch fully branded financial products to their SME and consumer customers without building or operating the underlying infrastructure.

At the other end of the spectrum, our APIs give businesses full control to build and scale customised products, all within a regulated infrastructure that removes the complexity of licensing, operations and scale. Across all clients, there is growing demand for unified infrastructure. Businesses want embedded payments services to work together. They want stronger visibility, fewer manual processes, and better control across international operations.

TFM: Equals is a unified platform for accounts, payments, cards and FX. What does that consolidation unlock for businesses?

NB: The goal is to simplify complex payment operations while maintaining strong governance and resilience. A single platform improves visibility, efficiency, security and governance across our clients’ financial operations. It helps businesses manage liquidity and currency exposure while reducing the operational complexity that comes with international growth.

TFM: Regulatory expectations across Europe are tightening. How does Equals design compliance into its platform while still enabling businesses to move quickly?

NB: Compliance must be embedded directly into the infrastructure, not treated as a separate process. That includes proactive onboarding, AML controls, transaction monitoring, safeguarding and sanctions screening. Because we own and build our platform, we can integrate those controls directly into payment workflows while adapting quickly as regulations evolve. At the same time, we work closely with customers to understand the realities of their business model rather than applying rigid one-size-fits-all processes.

The goal for us is to reduce organisational friction while also maintaining strong governance and resilience.

TFM: Equals has invested heavily in secure infrastructure. How is technology evolving your approach to AML and fraud prevention?

NB: Technology is making compliance and fraud prevention far more proactive and intelligence-led. We use AI-enabled monitoring and automation to identify anomalies earlier across payment flows, freeing up our human compliance team to investigate any issues that require greater oversight.

We see technology as an enhancement to human expertise, rather than a replacement for it. Financial crime risk is increasingly sophisticated and international, so businesses need adaptive monitoring capabilities and experienced specialists who can apply operational judgement when complexity arises.

TFM: What does ‘next-generation corporate payments and treasury infrastructure’ look like over the next five years?

NB: The market is moving toward integrated, programmable financial infrastructure. We’ve rebuilt our platform over the last four years from the ground up to create a foundation for future innovation. We can support more intelligent payment routing, tokenised treasury models designed to improve speed, cost efficiency, capital optimisation and greater operational flexibility for international businesses.

In regulated industries like ours, security and compliance remain fundamental to innovation. As business complexity increases, service quality and partnership will be seen as just as important as the technology itself.

TFM: Can you tell us about the report you published at Money 20/20 Europe this year?

NB: The report was compiled with Visa Consulting & Analytics and advances the conversation beyond sizing the market opportunity to uncover the hidden realities for organisations delivering embedded finance and payments projects to market. We’ve identified a gap between the expectations of businesses adopting embedded finance, and the ability of suppliers to deliver the onboarding, operational and compliance support that they need to maximise its value.

There is growing recognition that infrastructure alone is not enough. Aligned to this, we’re watching how the market balances AI-driven efficiency with demand for genuine human expertise and accountability. We chose to launch it at M20/20 Europe because it’s a good forum to talk to our partners – Tier 1 banks, neobanks and fintechs, digital asset exchanges – about how the current economic environment is shaping their approach to embedded payments.

TFM: Finally, what’s next for Equals?

NB: We are focussed on helping more clients to access our breadth of embedded payments services, and we continue to invest in AI-enabled infrastructure, payment orchestration, compliance and security capabilities that help exceptional businesses to scale globally with greater control and operational clarity.

Ultimately, our focus is on being the trusted partner for businesses and their customers as global payments become more complex.

To download the report and learn more about Equals embedded finance and payments solutions, visit: www.equalsmoney.com/whitepaper-premium-service-research


This article was published in The Fintech Magazine Issue #38, Page 50-51

The post EXCLUSIVE: “Simplifying Complexity in Global Money” – Nathan Best, Equals in ‘The Fintech Magazine’ appeared first on FF News | Fintech Finance.

SPACEX(PRE) Launchpad

SPACEX(PRE) LaunchpadSPACEX(PRE) Launchpad

Register for a chance to win a free lucky draw

Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen crypto.news@mexc.com ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

Pi Network V26 Shock Prediction Could Change Pi Coin Forever

Pi Network V26 Shock Prediction Could Change Pi Coin Forever

Pi Network V26 Shock Prediction Could Change Pi Coin Forever Pi Network is once again becoming one of the hottest topics in the crypto world after growing
Paylaş
Hokanews2026/06/04 18:44
USDH Power Struggle Ignites Stablecoin “Bidding Wars” Across DeFi: Bloomberg

USDH Power Struggle Ignites Stablecoin “Bidding Wars” Across DeFi: Bloomberg

A heated contest for control over a new dollar-pegged token has set the stage for what analysts say could define the next phase of the stablecoin industry. According to Bloomberg, a bidding war unfolded on Hyperliquid, one of crypto’s fastest-growing trading platforms, with the prize being the right to issue USDH, its native stablecoin. The competition drew some of the sector’s most prominent names, including Paxos, Sky, and Ethena, who later withdrew their bid, alongside the lesser-known Native Markets, a startup backed by Stripe stablecoin subsidiary Bridge. Hyperliquid Stablecoin Race Shows Branding and Partnerships Matter as Much as Tech Over the weekend, Hyperliquid’s validators, the contributors who secure the network and vote on key decisions, awarded the USDH contract to Native Markets over the weekend. Despite its relatively new status, the firm’s connection with Stripe helped it outpace more established rivals. Stablecoins underpin decentralized finance by providing a dollar-backed medium for collateral, settlement, and payments across applications. What began as a grassroots, community-led sector has evolved into a battleground for institutions and payment companies seeking revenue from interest on reserves. Circle, for example, shares proceeds from its USDC with Coinbase under a partnership designed to stabilize earnings during market swings. The Hyperliquid contest offered a rare glimpse into just how intense competition has become. Paxos pledged to take no revenue until USDH surpassed $1 billion in circulation. Agora offered to share 100% of net revenue with Hyperliquid, while Ethena put forward 95%. All were outbid by Native Markets, whose ties to Stripe’s $1.1 billion acquisition of Bridge and subsequent rollout of the Tempo blockchain positioned it as a strong contender. “Every stablecoin issuer is extremely desperate for supply,” said Zaheer Ebtikar, co-founder of Split Capital. “They are willing to publicly announce how much they are willing to offer. It just shows it’s a very tough business for stablecoin issuers.” While USDC remains dominant on Hyperliquid with more than $5.6 billion in deposits, the arrival of USDH could shift flows and revenue dynamics. Paxos co-founder Bhau Kotecha said the firm sees the exchange’s growth as an important opportunity, while Agora’s co-founder Nick van Eck warned that awarding the contract to a vertically integrated issuer risked undermining decentralization. Regulatory positioning also factored into the debate. Paxos operates under a New York trust charter and is seeking a federal license, while Bridge holds money transmitter approvals in 30 states. Native Markets, in a blog post, cited regulatory flexibility and deployment speed as reasons for its selection. Hyperliquid said the strong engagement from its community validated the process. Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire dismissed concerns over USDC’s status, noting on X that competition benefits the ecosystem. Analysts suggested that fears of centralization may be exaggerated, noting that Hyperliquid is likely to remain neutral and support multiple stablecoins. Still, the contest over USDH highlighted a new reality for stablecoins: branding, partnerships, and business strategy are becoming as decisive as technology. Native Markets Secures USDH Stablecoin Mandate on Hyperliquid Hyperliquid has concluded its governance vote for the USDH stablecoin, awarding the mandate to Native Markets after a closely watched process that drew weeks of community debate and rival proposals. USDH, described by Hyperliquid as a “Hyperliquid-first, compliant, and natively minted” dollar-backed token, is intended to reduce the platform’s dependence on USDC and strengthen its spot markets. Validators on the decentralized exchange voted in favor of Native Markets, a relatively new player backed by Stripe’s Bridge subsidiary, over established contenders including Paxos and Ethena. The outcome followed a string of proposals offering aggressive revenue-sharing terms to win validator support, underscoring the scale of incentives attached to controlling USDH. Hyperliquid’s exchange has become a critical hub for stablecoin liquidity, with $5.7 billion in USDC, around 8% of its total supply, currently held on the network. At prevailing treasury yields, that translates to an estimated $200 million to $220 million in annual revenue for Circle, underlining why a native alternative could be transformative. Hyperliquid’s validators, who secure the network and vote on key decisions, selected Native Markets following an on-chain governance process that concluded September 15. Native Markets has laid out a phased rollout for USDH, beginning with capped minting and redemption trials before expanding into spot markets. Its reserves will be managed in cash and treasuries by BlackRock, with on-chain tokenization through Superstate and Bridge. Yield from those reserves will be split between Hyperliquid’s Assistance Fund and ecosystem development. The launch of USDH comes as Hyperliquid records record profits from perpetual futures trading, with $106 million in revenue in August alone, and prepares to slash spot trading fees by 80% to bolster liquidity. Analysts say the move positions Hyperliquid to capture more of the stablecoin economics internally, marking a significant step in its bid to rival the largest players in decentralized finance
Paylaş
CryptoNews2025/09/18 00:48
Strategy Didn’t Sell Bitcoin in May, According to Polymarket

Strategy Didn’t Sell Bitcoin in May, According to Polymarket

Strategy's sale of 32 BTC in May sparked one of the most contentious debates around Polymarket's resolution criteria.
Paylaş
CryptoPotato2026/06/04 18:13

RealStocks Now Live

RealStocks Now LiveRealStocks Now Live

Trade real U.S. stock via regulated brokerage