TruBit Taps MoneyGram to Supercharge LATAM Crypto On/Off-Ramps

TruBit, a heavy hitter in Latin America’s crypto payment scene, just dropped a major update: they’re syncing up with MoneyGram International to roll out MoneyGram Access™ across LATAM. Announced February 24, 2025, from Dallas, this integration—built with the Stellar Development Foundation—lets users flip fiat to USDC and back at MoneyGram’s sprawling network. It’s live in Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, and Colombia, markets that sucked in $82.06 billion in remittances last year alone, per Bank of Mexico’s 2024 tally of $64.75 billion for Mexico.
This isn’t just another partnership. It’s a calculated jab at LATAM’s cash-heavy remittance chokehold, where banks still lag and crypto’s picking up steam. TruBit’s leveraging Stellar’s blockchain—fast, cheap, and battle-tested with billions of ops—to pair with MoneyGram’s cash points like OXXO, Cobro Express, and Bancolombia. Users can walk in, dump local fiat, grab USDC in their TruBit Wallet, or cash out digital holdings across 150+ countries. With USDC as the stablecoin glue, it’s a slick workaround for volatile local currencies and slow cross-border wires.

The Crypto Angle: Why This Hits Different
LATAM’s crypto adoption is spiking—Brazil’s trading volumes hit $6 billion in 2024 (Chainalysis), and Argentina’s dodging peso chaos with stables. Mexico’s remittance haul keeps climbing, projected to nudge $66 billion in 2025 as diaspora flows from the U.S. swell. TruBit and MoneyGram are betting big on this: cash-to-USDC ramps at scale, tapping a network covering 35+ countries for deposits and 150+ for withdrawals. It’s not sexy, but it’s practical—especially with USDC’s market cap ballooning past $40 billion in early 2025, cementing it as the go-to stablecoin for real-world use.
Maggie Wu, TruBit’s CEO, nailed it:
“This ties cash to crypto like USDC in a way that actually works for LATAM. MoneyGram’s reach plus our wallet tech is a no-brainer for users who don’t trust banks or can’t wait on wires.”
What’s in It for Crypto Heads?
TruBit’s not new to this game—launched in 2020, they’ve got a foothold in Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Chile, and Peru, plus eyes on the U.S. and Europe. Their stack includes TruBit Business for cross-border fiat-crypto rails, TruBit Pro for traders chasing leverage, and a wallet with Earn+ perks. The Mastercard TruBit card’s a bonus for spending crypto at bodegas or online. This MoneyGram hookup amps their on/off-ramp game, a weak spot for most platforms where fiat conversion still feels like 2017.
MoneyGram’s no slouch either. They’re moving $200 billion yearly, with digital txns now over 50% of their transfers. Pair that with Stellar’s blockchain—optimized for payments, not meme coins—and you’ve got a trio that could eat Binance’s lunch in LATAM’s remittance corridor. Stellar’s processed billions of ops since 2014; it’s not hype, it’s infra.
Current Context: Timing’s Everything
This lands as LATAM’s crypto pulse quickens. Argentina’s Milei is still pro-Bitcoin, but practical cash-to-stablecoin bridges like this dodge the volatility debate. Brazil’s central bank is teasing a 2025 CBDC rollout, yet private stables like USDC are outpacing regulatory sandboxes. Mexico’s fintech law tweaks in late 2024 opened doors wider for crypto rails. Meanwhile, Chainalysis pegs LATAM’s 2025 crypto txns to jump 20%—TruBit’s positioning to catch that wave, not chase it.
The Bottom Line
This isn’t about flashy DeFi yields or NFT flips. It’s nuts-and-bolts crypto adoption: cash in, crypto out, no PhD required. For LATAM’s unbanked or remittance-reliant, it’s a lifeline. For TruBit, it’s a flex—cementing them as the region’s fiat-crypto switchboard. MoneyGram gets a blockchain edge, and Stellar proves it’s more than a Ripple footnote. Expect copycats, but TruBit’s first-mover play could lock in LATAM’s crypto-curious before the herd arrives.
Stick with Blockrora.com News for the latest on how TruBit, MoneyGram, and Stellar are rewiring LATAM’s crypto pipes.