TreSori gives banks, remittance companies, and enterprises production-ready wallet infrastructure across 50+ blockchains. No need to build your own stack. Seven major economies now regulate stablecoins as payment rails.
New Delhi, April 2026
New Delhi, March 2026 – Stablecoin payment volumes grew 85 per cent year-on-year to $11.1 trillion in 2025, outpacing most traditional payment networks. Seven major economies, including the US, EU, UK, Singapore, Hong Kong, UAE, and Japan, have now introduced regulatory frameworks mandating full reserve backing, licensed issuers, and guaranteed redemption rights for stablecoins. The IMF has acknowledged that stablecoins can improve global payments and finance, particularly for cross-border remittances where traditional systems remain slow and expensive.
Against this backdrop, Kalp Digital has launched TreSori, an on-chain finance infrastructure platform that enables banks, remittance companies, fintechs, and enterprises to build stablecoin-powered payment products without constructing their own blockchain stack from scratch.
“The question isn’t whether stablecoins become payment infrastructure. That ship sailed,” said Mrityunjaya Prajapati. “The real question is who provides the plumbing. Most financial institutions want to move on-chain. They don’t have the engineering bench to build compliant wallet infrastructure, multi-chain settlement, and key management systems on their own. TreSori is that layer.”
The Infrastructure Gap
The demand side has moved fast. Faster than most people realize.
In September 2025, SWIFT announced a blockchain-based shared ledger involving 30-plus financial institutions from 16 countries. Bank of America, Citi, JP Morgan, HSBC, Deutsche Bank, Standard Chartered. All in. In December 2025, the OCC granted conditional bank charters to five digital asset firms: BitGo, Circle, Fidelity Digital Assets, Paxos, and Ripple. JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Citigroup started collaborating on a cooperative token project for fully collateralized digital tokens redeemable through member banks. Visa launched a cross-border stablecoin settlement program in October 2025 that cut settlement from days to minutes.
But here’s the gap. The supply side hasn’t kept up. Most wallet products on the market were built for the retail crypto cycle of 2020 to 2023. They work fine for someone holding tokens on their phone. They don’t work for a bank that needs compliance architecture, multi-chain interoperability, and institutional-grade key management. Two different problems entirely.
“The crypto wallet was designed for individuals holding tokens,” Prajapati said. “On-chain finance needs something else altogether. Infrastructure where the end user never sees the word blockchain. They see their balance, they tap send, money moves. The wallet sits underneath, handling settlement. But what the customer experiences? That’s pure fintech.”
What TreSori Actually Does

TreSori provides enterprise wallet infrastructure supporting four custody models. Custodial wallets, where the platform manages keys on behalf of users. Self-custody wallets, where users hold their own keys. MPC wallets, where keys are distributed across multiple parties so there’s no single point of failure. And smart contract wallets with programmable rules baked in.
The platform operates across 50-plus blockchains. Three primary use cases.
First, stablecoin-powered payments. Banks and fintechs can issue wallets to millions of customers without requiring anyone to manage private keys. KYC verification, sanctions screening, spending limits, jurisdiction-specific rules. All enforced at the wallet level.
Second, cross-border remittance and settlement. The global cross-border payments market hit $195 trillion in 2024. Forecast: $320 trillion by 2032. Remittance companies on TreSori’s infrastructure settle transfers on stablecoin rails. Fees drop from 3 to 7 per cent down to a fraction of that. Regulatory compliance stays intact.
Third, gaming and iGaming payouts. Stablecoins now account for 30 per cent of all on-chain transaction volume, and adoption in gaming is climbing fast. Instant, low-cost cross-border payouts are table stakes in that industry. TreSori lets gaming platforms embed wallet infrastructure directly into their products. Payouts across geographies. No crypto interface for the end user.
Across all three, the platform ships with role-based access controls, multi-level approval workflows, full audit trails, and a compliance layer that adapts to whatever the local regulator requires.
Why India and the UAE Matter Right Now
Two markets stand out.
India pulled in over $130 billion in remittance inflows in FY25. Largest remittance-receiving country on the planet. And most of that money still crawls through correspondent banking networks with settlement measured in days, not seconds. The government is considering stablecoin regulations at the same time the RBI expands its Digital Rupee CBDC pilot. Both public and private digital currency rails will coexist. That’s not speculation. That’s the direction the policy is heading.
In the UAE, the Central Bank introduced a dedicated Payment Token Services Regulation. Zand Bank launched the country’s first regulated AED-backed stablecoin in November 2025. RAKBank got in-principle approval for a dirham-pegged stablecoin in January 2026. The infrastructure demand in both markets isn’t theoretical. It’s immediate.
“India built UPI and proved shared payment infrastructure can reach 350 million users,” said Prajapati. “The UAE is building the most progressive stablecoin regulatory framework anywhere. Both markets need the same thing: enterprise-grade wallet infrastructure that’s compliant, multi-chain, and built to scale. That’s TreSori.”
The Bigger Picture
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has projected stablecoin supply could reach $2 to 3 trillion by 2030. The World Economic Forum has flagged interoperability as the make-or-break challenge for stablecoins to function as global financial infrastructure. Galaxy Research thinks stablecoin transaction volumes will pass major credit card networks like Visa within this year.
TreSori is built on a specific thesis: the winning infrastructure won’t be locked to one chain or one geography. It’ll be the layer that works across chains, across jurisdictions, across custody models. Financial institutions focus on their customers. The blockchain plumbing stays invisible.
“On-chain finance is the biggest infrastructure opportunity since UPI,” Prajapati said. “And just like UPI, the winners won’t be the loudest. They’ll be the ones who build the best pipes.”
About Kalp Digital
Kalp Digital builds blockchain infrastructure for developers, enterprises, and financial institutions. Its no-code platform, Kalp Studio, has onboarded over 15,000 developers across 50-plus blockchains. Mrityunjaya Prajapati, Chief Technology Officer of Kalp Digital, is a computer science graduate from NIT Bhopal with 16-plus years in software engineering, blockchain, and AI.
About TreSori
Tresori is an on-chain finance infrastructure platform providing enterprise-grade wallet services across 50-plus blockchains. It supports custodial, self-custody, MPC, and smart contract wallets with built-in compliance, multi-chain interoperability, and institutional-grade key management. Built on Kalp Digital’s blockchain infrastructure, TreSori serves banks, remittance companies, fintechs, and gaming platforms globally.
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