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Lizarondo argues that the next stage of Web3 will hinge on making stablecoins not just a store of value but a true medium of exchange. “It’s one thing to trade stablecoins on an exchange,” he says. “It’s another to be able to walk into a shop or pay online in real time without even thinking about the underlying blockchain.”
That vision shaped his own journey. Back in 2021, Lizarondo and his team introduced one of the first crypto debit cards tied to stablecoins. It was a radical step at a time when much of the industry was focused on speculation rather than utility. The concept allowed users to spend their holdings instantly, making digital assets feel less like a gamble and more like a currency.
For Lizarondo, this was more than just a product launch — it was proof that Web3 could work in practice, not just theory. “When people experience seamless transactions with stablecoins, they stop worrying about volatility and start recognising the advantages of programmable money,” he explains.
The implications for global finance are significant. Stablecoins, pegged to assets like the US dollar, offer speed, transparency, and low fees that traditional systems struggle to match. In regions with unstable banking systems, they also provide access to cross-border payments and savings tools that were once out of reach.
Yet Lizarondo is realistic about the challenges ahead. Regulatory scrutiny is intensifying, and adoption will require cooperation between governments, businesses, and consumers. “The next era of Web3 isn’t about hype,” he says. “It’s about infrastructure — building systems that are safe, compliant, and scalable.”
Still, his optimism remains intact. Having witnessed crypto’s cycles of boom and bust, Lizarondo sees stablecoin spending as a steady path forward. In his view, the story of Web3 won’t be written by speculative tokens, but by the everyday transactions that make digital money ordinary.
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