The Inflection Point
We are witnessing the most significant transformation in payments since the advent of electronic funds transfer. The convergence of real-time payment rails, programmable money, and API-first infrastructure is creating a future where the question isn't "when will my payment arrive?" but "why would payment ever take more than seconds?"
The data tells the story. Global real-time payment transactions reached 266 billion in 2023 and are accelerating toward comprising over 25% of all electronic payments by 2028. The open banking market has grown to $25.9 billion in 2025, projected to nearly double to $46.9 billion by 2030. More than 470 million people worldwide now use open banking services. These aren't incremental improvements—they represent a fundamental restructuring of how money moves.
Real-Time Rails: The New Baseline
The era of waiting days for payments to clear is ending. In the United States, FedNow processed over 2.1 million transactions in Q2 2025 alone—a 1,200% year-over-year increase in volume. Combined with The Clearing House's RTP network, which processes roughly 1 million payments daily and reaches 70% of demand deposit accounts, instant payment capability has shifted from novelty to expectation.
What makes this moment different from previous payment innovations is the infrastructure reaching critical mass simultaneously across multiple dimensions. The UK recorded 31 million open banking payments in March 2025—about 1 in 13 of all Faster Payments. That represents 70% year-over-year growth in open banking payments volume.
For banks, this creates both opportunity and urgency. The institutions enabling instant payments across multiple rails—58% of US financial institutions now support both RTP and FedNow—gain competitive positioning. Those still operating on batch-processing mentalities will find themselves increasingly unable to meet customer expectations.
APIs: The New Plumbing
The transformation isn't just about speed—it's about programmability. API adoption in financial services grew 42% in 2024, with real-time transaction processing via APIs increasing 63% in the past year. Over 90% of financial institutions now rely on APIs to deliver customer experiences.
This represents a fundamental architectural shift. Legacy payment systems were designed around scheduled batches and manual reconciliation. API-native infrastructure treats every payment as an intelligent event—capable of triggering automated responses, informing risk decisions, and integrating with business systems in real time.
The embedded finance market has reached $146 billion in 2025, projected to grow to $690 billion by 2030. This growth reflects a new reality: payments are no longer standalone transactions but programmable components embedded into business workflows, customer journeys, and automated processes.
Stablecoins: From Experiment to Infrastructure
Perhaps no development challenges traditional payment assumptions more directly than stablecoins. In the first half of 2025, stablecoins processed over $8.9 trillion in on-chain volume. On an adjusted basis, stablecoin throughput now exceeds five times PayPal's volume and more than half of Visa's.
The enterprise adoption curve has inflected. 71% of firms are already using stablecoins for cross-border payments. 86% report their infrastructure is ready for stablecoin adoption. Among organizations using stablecoins, 41% report cost savings of at least 10%, primarily in B2B cross-border payments.
What's driving adoption isn't the technology itself—it's the economics. 48% of firms cite real-time settlement as the primary advantage, while traditional cost savings ranks lower. Stablecoins aren't just cheaper; they're structurally faster. When a steel trader or ship broker can settle a transaction in seconds rather than days, the cash flow implications compound across their entire business.
Critically, regulation has become a tailwind rather than a headwind. 85% of firms now see new rules and standards as enabling adoption—up from just 25% who said regulation wasn't a barrier in 2023. The US passed the GENIUS Act, Hong Kong passed its Stablecoin Bill, and the EU's MiCA regulation is now in effect. The regulatory uncertainty that previously constrained institutional adoption is resolving.
The Convergence Ahead
The most significant development isn't any single innovation—it's how these trends are converging. Real-time rails provide instant domestic settlement. APIs enable programmable integration. Stablecoins offer 24/7 cross-border capability with transparent, predictable settlement.
Traditional payment networks operated as separate, incompatible systems. The emerging infrastructure is inherently interoperable—or will be. Payments will flow across rails based on speed, cost, and capability requirements rather than arbitrary system boundaries.
This has profound implications for banks. The institutions that build for this convergence—supporting multiple real-time rails, exposing rich API capabilities, and preparing for stablecoin integration—will capture the value of orchestrating payments across the new landscape. Those that treat each innovation as a separate compliance exercise will find themselves relegated to commodity processing.
What Banks Must Build
The winners in this environment share common characteristics:
Multi-rail capability. Supporting a single payment rail is no longer sufficient. The 58% of banks enabling both RTP and FedNow understand that reach requires redundancy. As stablecoin rails mature, this will expand further.
API-first architecture. Payment systems designed around batch files and scheduled processing cannot compete with real-time, event-driven infrastructure. The 63% growth in real-time API transactions reflects customers and businesses demanding programmatic access to payment capabilities.
Real-time data integration. Payment intelligence—fraud detection, compliance monitoring, cash flow forecasting—depends on seeing transactions as they occur, not hours or days later. Systems that separate payment execution from payment intelligence cannot deliver the insight customers increasingly expect.
Just-in-time processing. The batch mentality assumes payments happen on schedules determined by system limitations. Modern infrastructure processes payments when they're needed—whether that's instant settlement for a time-sensitive transaction or optimized timing for cash flow management.
The Strategic Imperative
The majority of financial institutions believe that 5-10% of global payment value will be conducted using stablecoins by 2030—representing $2.1 to $4.2 trillion in value. Add the continued growth of account-to-account payments enabled by open banking, and the share of payments flowing through traditional card rails will continue declining.
This isn't a threat to banks—it's an opportunity to redefine their role. Banks with modern infrastructure can position themselves as orchestrators of this multi-rail future, selecting optimal payment paths, providing real-time visibility, and ensuring compliance across an increasingly complex landscape.
The institutions that recognize this are investing now. Venture capital poured $4.2 billion into embedded finance startups in Q1 2025 alone. The competitive pressure isn't coming from other banks—it's coming from infrastructure providers and fintechs building the payment systems banks will either control or depend upon.
What We're Building
At adapfin, we architected Nucleus BankOS for exactly this moment. Our platform supports multi-rail payment processing—traditional ACH, real-time rails, and emerging payment types—through a unified API layer. Payment decisions can be programmatic, selecting optimal rails based on speed, cost, and counterparty capability.
More importantly, payments integrate with the complete banking operation. When a payment initiates, the same infrastructure that processes the transaction can inform fraud detection, update cash flow projections, trigger downstream workflows, and maintain compliance documentation—all in real time, all through a single platform.
The future of payments isn't about any single technology. It's about infrastructure that treats payments as intelligent, programmable events rather than dumb transfers between accounts. The banks that build for that future will define the next era of financial services.
The ones that don't will be displaced by those who do.





