

(SeaPRwire) – By: Oliver Hawthorne
Enterprise stablecoins face a persistent trust gap. Big corporations shun unregulated options. Regulated alternatives often lack liquidity for large transfers. USDGO’s recent surge cuts through this deadlock. Competitors are scrambling to catch up.
On June 16, 2026, OSL Group announced USDGO’s circulating supply topped $500 million. The stablecoin launched in February 2026. It hit $100 million in circulation just two months later. USDGO operates under the US GENIUS Act regulatory framework. Anchorage Digital Bank, the first US federally chartered crypto bank, issues it. OSL serves as brand operator and distributor. Its reserves now include JPMorgan’s tokenized money market fund JLTXX. Previously, it held BlackRock’s BUIDL and Goldman Sachs’ STBXX. All reserves are 1:1 backed by high-quality liquid assets, audited third-party. USDGO has partnered with firms like Banxa, Yellow Card, and Geoswift for cross-border payments. It also works with Solana, Fireblocks, and Amber Group for on-chain infrastructure and custody. These partnerships cover emerging and developed markets, from e-commerce to corporate treasury management.
Wall Street’s tokenized funds in USDGO’s reserves aren’t just PR fluff. They signal institutional confidence that attracts more enterprise clients. More clients boost liquidity, making USDGO viable for larger, higher-frequency transfers. This cycle locks in market share. Competitors will struggle to match its mix of regulatory compliance and big-name backing. USDGO is on track to become the dominant stablecoin for global enterprise payments.
Author bio: Oliver Hawthorne, Principal Correspondent at an international tech review, covers digital finance and blockchain infrastructure.
