Forward the Original Title âDragonflyâs Bet? Understanding Codex: A Stablecoin Payment Platform for Enterprises | CryptoSeedâ
Codex aims to create a native stablecoin cross-border payment infrastructure for companies, moving it from merely âusableâ to truly âuser-friendly.â
On April 4, Codex, a stablecoin company, secured $15.8 million in seed funding, led by renowned investment firm Dragonfly, with additional investments from Coinbase Ventures, Wintermute, and Selini Capital.
Interestingly, Codexâs official X account only posted its first content on the day the funding was announced (April 4), followed by news of the substantial funding, adding an air of mystery.
The stablecoin market has seen rapid growth in recent years. In 2019, global circulation was about $4 billion, and it has now reached nearly $235 billion, growing almost 60 times. However, the primary users remain individual consumers and crypto traders, with few businesses using stablecoins for cross-border operations.
Codex aims to change this. Their goal is not just to make stablecoins âusableâ for businesses but to make them the default method for daily cross-border payments, fund management, and transactions, as natural as todayâs bank transfers or SWIFT payments. To achieve this, Codex is taking on the challenge of completely redesigning the stablecoin infrastructure from the foundational blockchain to APIs, foreign exchange systems, and account structures, all centered around business needs.
While stablecoins appear to offer functionalities like transfers, currency exchange, and wallet integration, making them âusable,â businesses still face numerous hurdles. For instance, small and medium-sized enterprises in Southeast Asia looking to use stablecoins for receiving dollars and paying suppliers confront issues like poor cross-chain compatibility, unpredictable fund arrival times, and a lack of transparent exchange rate mechanisms. They often cannot integrate with enterprise financial systems, relying on chat groups and manual processes for reconciliation, which is inefficient and risky.
Businesses are interested in stablecoins, but the current tools do not meet their needs. Ironically, businesses are the ones who need stablecoins the most. Especially in emerging markets, many companies face high inflation, currency devaluation, and costly cross-border payments. Even small efficiency gains, like faster fund arrival or reduced exchange costs, can significantly impact cash flow.
Codex addresses these real challenges, aiming to transition stablecoins from âusableâ to âuser-friendlyâ and ultimately integrate them into corporate financial infrastructure.
Codex offers not just a âtoolâ but a comprehensive stablecoin infrastructure. Their approach is straightforward: turn the four most common business activitiesâreceiving payments, making payments, exchanging currencies, and managing accountsâinto a single interface.
To achieve this, Codex developed Codex Chain, a blockchain specifically for stablecoin transactions. It focuses not on being the âmost openâ or âmost feature-rich,â but on optimizing the three things businesses care most about: security, predictability, and processing efficiency. In real-world scenarios, stability and reliability are more crucial than âinnovation.â
Additionally, Codex provides a full suite of easy-to-integrate APIs, allowing engineering teams to incorporate them into existing systems with minimal coding, enabling automated stablecoin transfers, settlements, and reconciliations, reducing technical barriers and speeding up implementation. Key features include:
These functions resemble traditional banking services. However, Codex reconstructs them on the stablecoin networkâmore efficient, faster, and with more flexible compliance paths.
Codexâs founders have backgrounds in both the crypto industry and traditional businesses. CEO Haonan Li was an early member of the Ethereum ecosystemâs Optimism, focusing on protocol design and governance mechanisms. Another co-founder, Victor Yaw, runs several traditional businesses in Southeast Asia, understanding the challenges of cross-border payments in real-world operations.
According to their official roadmap, Codex has launched institutional-level services in the Philippines and plans to expand to Singapore, the UK, Dubai, and Hong Kong in the second quarter.
(This article only covers early-stage projects and does not constitute investment advice.)
This article is reprinted from [ChainCatcher]. Forward the Original Title âDragonflyâs Bet? Understanding Codex: A Stablecoin Payment Platform for Enterprises | CryptoSeedâ. All copyrights belong to the original author [Scof, ChainCatcher]. If there are objections to this reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team, and they will handle it promptly.
Liability Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not constitute any investment advice.
Translations of the article into other languages are done by the Gate Learn team. Unless mentioned Gate.io., copying, distributing, or plagiarizing the translated articles is prohibited.
Forward the Original Title âDragonflyâs Bet? Understanding Codex: A Stablecoin Payment Platform for Enterprises | CryptoSeedâ
Codex aims to create a native stablecoin cross-border payment infrastructure for companies, moving it from merely âusableâ to truly âuser-friendly.â
On April 4, Codex, a stablecoin company, secured $15.8 million in seed funding, led by renowned investment firm Dragonfly, with additional investments from Coinbase Ventures, Wintermute, and Selini Capital.
Interestingly, Codexâs official X account only posted its first content on the day the funding was announced (April 4), followed by news of the substantial funding, adding an air of mystery.
The stablecoin market has seen rapid growth in recent years. In 2019, global circulation was about $4 billion, and it has now reached nearly $235 billion, growing almost 60 times. However, the primary users remain individual consumers and crypto traders, with few businesses using stablecoins for cross-border operations.
Codex aims to change this. Their goal is not just to make stablecoins âusableâ for businesses but to make them the default method for daily cross-border payments, fund management, and transactions, as natural as todayâs bank transfers or SWIFT payments. To achieve this, Codex is taking on the challenge of completely redesigning the stablecoin infrastructure from the foundational blockchain to APIs, foreign exchange systems, and account structures, all centered around business needs.
While stablecoins appear to offer functionalities like transfers, currency exchange, and wallet integration, making them âusable,â businesses still face numerous hurdles. For instance, small and medium-sized enterprises in Southeast Asia looking to use stablecoins for receiving dollars and paying suppliers confront issues like poor cross-chain compatibility, unpredictable fund arrival times, and a lack of transparent exchange rate mechanisms. They often cannot integrate with enterprise financial systems, relying on chat groups and manual processes for reconciliation, which is inefficient and risky.
Businesses are interested in stablecoins, but the current tools do not meet their needs. Ironically, businesses are the ones who need stablecoins the most. Especially in emerging markets, many companies face high inflation, currency devaluation, and costly cross-border payments. Even small efficiency gains, like faster fund arrival or reduced exchange costs, can significantly impact cash flow.
Codex addresses these real challenges, aiming to transition stablecoins from âusableâ to âuser-friendlyâ and ultimately integrate them into corporate financial infrastructure.
Codex offers not just a âtoolâ but a comprehensive stablecoin infrastructure. Their approach is straightforward: turn the four most common business activitiesâreceiving payments, making payments, exchanging currencies, and managing accountsâinto a single interface.
To achieve this, Codex developed Codex Chain, a blockchain specifically for stablecoin transactions. It focuses not on being the âmost openâ or âmost feature-rich,â but on optimizing the three things businesses care most about: security, predictability, and processing efficiency. In real-world scenarios, stability and reliability are more crucial than âinnovation.â
Additionally, Codex provides a full suite of easy-to-integrate APIs, allowing engineering teams to incorporate them into existing systems with minimal coding, enabling automated stablecoin transfers, settlements, and reconciliations, reducing technical barriers and speeding up implementation. Key features include:
These functions resemble traditional banking services. However, Codex reconstructs them on the stablecoin networkâmore efficient, faster, and with more flexible compliance paths.
Codexâs founders have backgrounds in both the crypto industry and traditional businesses. CEO Haonan Li was an early member of the Ethereum ecosystemâs Optimism, focusing on protocol design and governance mechanisms. Another co-founder, Victor Yaw, runs several traditional businesses in Southeast Asia, understanding the challenges of cross-border payments in real-world operations.
According to their official roadmap, Codex has launched institutional-level services in the Philippines and plans to expand to Singapore, the UK, Dubai, and Hong Kong in the second quarter.
(This article only covers early-stage projects and does not constitute investment advice.)
This article is reprinted from [ChainCatcher]. Forward the Original Title âDragonflyâs Bet? Understanding Codex: A Stablecoin Payment Platform for Enterprises | CryptoSeedâ. All copyrights belong to the original author [Scof, ChainCatcher]. If there are objections to this reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team, and they will handle it promptly.
Liability Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not constitute any investment advice.
Translations of the article into other languages are done by the Gate Learn team. Unless mentioned Gate.io., copying, distributing, or plagiarizing the translated articles is prohibited.