Klarna Taps Coinbase to Replace Commercial Paper with USDC Liquidity

Global payments firm Klarna (KLAR) has opened a new liquidity vein, partnering with Coinbase (COIN) to raise short-term capital directly from institutional investors via USDC. The move signals a shift in how major fintechs manage backend treasury operations, bypassing traditional commercial paper markets for blockchain-native yields.

The Mechanism: Crypto as Commercial Paper

Announced in a filing on Friday, the deal allows Klarna to issue debt denominated in USDC using Coinbase’s institutional infrastructure. This effectively creates a digital alternative to standard commercial paper, allowing Klarna to tap into deep pools of on-chain liquidity held by crypto-native funds and treasuries.

Klarna CFO Niclas Neglén framed the move as a diversification play rather than a marketing stunt:

“Stablecoin connects us to an entirely new class of institutional investors, and gives us the potential to diversify our funding sources in ways that simply weren’t possible a few years ago.”

Market Context

The partnership arrives as Klarna, which listed on the NYSE in September, seeks to optimize its $11 billion valuation under public market scrutiny. For Coinbase, the deal validates its institutional custody arm, helping the stock hold steady at $245.12 (+2.47%) amid broader market chop.

Crucially, this is a backend treasury upgrade, not a consumer feature. While Klarna confirmed it is building a consumer wallet and a "KlarnaUSD" stablecoin, those products are slated for a 2026 rollout. For now, the focus is strictly on liquidity efficiency.

> ABOUT_THE_AUTHOR _

Amir Rocha

// Crypto News Reporter

I’m Amir Rocha, a reporter who believes you shouldn't need a computer science degree to understand the future of money. I spend my days translating technical developments from Zero-Knowledge rollups into clear, actionable insights for SEC filings. After 8 years in the blockchain space, I’ve learned that the most important story isn't the price, but the technology underneath. I write to help you spot the difference between genuine innovation and a marketing gimmick

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