The Good Tech Companies - Commerce DeFi: How Blockchain Payments Will Fuel the Next Wave of Crypto Adoption
Episode Date: February 25, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/commerce-defi-how-blockchain-payments-will-fuel-the-next-wave-of-crypto-adoption. Commerce D...eFi makes crypto usable daily with stablecoins, instant payments & tokenized loyalty, cutting fees & bridging DeFi with real-world commerce. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #stablecoins, #commerce-defi, #carter-razink, #spree-finance, #tokenized-loyalty, #tokenized-attention, #web3-regulation, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @phillcomm. Learn more about this writer by checking @phillcomm's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Commerce DeFi bridges decentralized finance (DeFi) with real-world commerce, making crypto practical for daily expenses like buying coffee or paying rent. By leveraging stablecoins, instant blockchain payments, and tokenized loyalty, it aims to reduce fees, speed up transactions, and enhance financial accessibility. Unlike traditional payment systems, which rely on intermediaries and high fees, Commerce DeFi offers peer-to-peer, global, and instant transactions. While early adoption faces regulatory and usability challenges, increasing merchant buy-in and improving infrastructure will drive mainstream use. Just as e-commerce revolutionized shopping, Commerce DeFi could make crypto indispensable for everyday transactions.
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Commerce Defy. How blockchain payments will fuel the next wave of crypto adoption,
by Philcom Global.
Hash hash hash by Carter Raisink of Spree Finance
It's no secret that decentralized finance, DeFi, has been a massive catalyst in crypto,
paving the way for on-chain lending, borrowing, and trading.
Yet practical, everyday use, like buying groceries-chain lending, borrowing, and trading. Yet practical, everyday
use, like buying groceries or paying rent, remains elusive. Enter CommerceDeFi, the intersection of
decentralized finance and real-world commerce. By blending stablecoins, instant blockchain payments,
and tokenized loyalty systems, CommerceDeFi has the potential to become the tipping point that
draws billions of people into the Web3 economy, much like how e-commerce sparked mass adoption of the
internet in the Web2 era. From yield farming to buying your morning coffee, traditional DeFi
focused on on-chain trading, liquidity pools, and yield. While revolutionary, these applications
mostly stayed within crypto circles. Commerce DeFi extends those innovations
to solve real-world problems in payments, loyalty, and lending for merchants and consumers.
Think of it as DeFi for mainstream commerce, bridging the gap between the crypto world and
everyday transactions. In the same way that e-commerce popularized the internet by making
it a go-to destination for shopping, Commerce Defi aims to make crypto useful for daily expenses. Whether it's booking a hotel, purchasing a coffee, or paying freelancers
globally, Commerce Defi wants to replicate Web2's simplicity with Web3's decentralized underpinnings.
The rise of stablecoins as digital cash, at the heart of Commerce Defi is the stablecoin,
a blockchain-based token pegged to a stable
asset like the US dollar. Unlike Bitcoin or ETH, whose prices can fluctuate dramatically,
stablecoins maintain consistent purchasing power, making them ideal for routine transactions.
A merchant who charges $50 doesn't want to end up with $40 if crypto prices dip the next day,
and a consumer doesn't want to overpay if prices spike.
Stablecoins serve as digital cash, combining the convenience of instant global transfers with the
familiarity of fiat currency. A shop in Argentina can accept a US dollar stablecoin without the
hassle of local currency volatility, while a US customer can pay seamlessly, avoiding
international wire fees. For the first time,
blockchain-based payments have a stable unit of account that businesses and customers can rely on.
What's wrong with traditional payment systems? Visa and MasterCard paved the way for widespread
credit and debit use, yet the underlying systems haven't evolved much since the 1970s.
Swiping a card triggers multiple intermediaries, acquirers, card networks,
issuing banks, all of whom to pay a cut. Merchants end up paying 2-4% plus per transaction on
average, and that's without adding cross-border fees. Add-in settlement delays, often one or two
business days for card payments, and even longer for international transfers, and you get a system
that feels clunky in an age of on-demand everything. Blockchain-based payments solve these inefficiencies by being peer-to-peer,
global, and permissionless fewer middlemen equals lower fees. No separate acquirer,
card network, or issuing bank. A stablecoin transfer often costs pennies, regardless of
transaction size. Instant settlement. Funds arrive and are usable in seconds,
not days. Open access. Anyone with internet can set up a crypto wallet. This is huge in countries
where traditional banking is limited or expensive. Tokenizing attention. Mean coins and loyalty
points. Commerce Defy isn't just about money, it's also about tokenizing consumer attention. In Web 2, businesses spent
heavily on ads to drive customer engagement. In Web 3, brands might issue loyalty tokens or
accept community-driven tokens, like memecoins, to attract buyers. Memecoins can act awesome on
ramp. People who hold them are eager to spend them if merchants accept them, especially if
the memecoin unlocks a novel real-world experience. Meanwhile, blockchain-based loyalty points are more transparent,
tradable, and usable across partners. When money and attention are both tokenized,
we get a self-reinforcing cycle. Customers shop to earn tokens, tokens create brand affinity,
and merchants gain direct marketing channels, no middleman ad networks needed. Short-term, early adoption.
Right now, stablecoins are already gaining traction in cross-border payments.
Freelancers in emerging markets might prefer stablecoins over local banks or PayPal,
since fees are lower and the transfers are nearly instant.
A handful of mainstream retailers have tested crypto acceptance,
usually converting crypto
TOFIAT automatically so they're not exposed to volatility. In this short-term phase,
ease of use and regulation are the biggest challenges. Crypto wallets are still more
complex than credit cards. Regulation is also fluid. Some countries embrace crypto while others
limit it. Still, the demand for cheaper, faster payments is universal,
so momentum continues. Medium-term. Growing merchant buy-in. As stablecoin usage grows
and blockchain transactions get faster and cheaper through better infrastructure,
like Layer 2 solutions, more merchants will see the cost-benefits of Commerce Defy.
Point-of-sale systems may integrate stable coin acceptance by default,
enabling businesses to avoid 2-4% plus card fees. Cross-border e-commerce will be one of the biggest
winners, letting global shoppers pay in a stable coin while merchants settle in their preferred
currency. Meanwhile, tokenized loyalty will get a boost. People might earn branded tokens for
every purchase, redeemable across a network of partners. Because these loyalty tokens trade on open markets, they have real value,
adding an incentive for buyers to choose certain merchants over others.
This medium-term adoption will be fueled by improving user interfaces,
making crypto payments feel as seamless as Apple Pay.
Long-term, mainstream commerce. In a decade, commerce
defy could be as ubiquitous as credit cards are today. Traditional banks or merchants themselves
may issue stablecoins of their own or integrate them for faster settlement, while global retailers
might run their own blockchain nodes for payments. The underlying rails will be decentralized,
yet user experiences might be abstracted away, shoppers could pay
through an APP that hides the blockchain complexities. At this stage, finance and
commerce fully merge on-chain, enabling automated business flows. Imagine a supplier who automatically
gets paid when shipping data confirms delivery, or a micro-subscription model where you pay by
the minute for online services in stablecoins. Programmable money and
programmable loyalty can power new business models that simply aren't possible on 20th-century
banking rails. Challenges in why they won't stop the tide. Regulation is the largest wildcard.
Governments want to ensure consumer protection, manage tax obligations, and prevent illicit
activity. Stablecoin issuers must prove they have robust
reserves. However, as commerce on-chain grows, regulators recognize the economic benefits of
transparent ledgers and reliable digital dollars. The result will likely be clearer compliance
frameworks, not outright bans, especially in a world where central governments need stablecoins
to purchase up their sovereign debt. User experience remains another hurdle. Many people are still unfamiliar with wallet addresses
and private keys. However, more crypto-enabled apps are abstracting away the jargon,
so users might not even realize they're using blockchains in the background.
If the benefits, lower fees, instant payments, true ownership of loyalty tokens, are clear,
users will adapt just
as they did for online shopping in the early 2000s. The e-commerce effect.
Commerce Defy is on track to become the killer application that propels crypto from niche
speculation to everyday utility. Like e-commerce did for Web2, it can bring billions of people
into the Web threefold by making digital assets indispensable for routine transactions. Stablecoins deliver the stable value and global accessibility needed to
replace outdated payment rails, while tokenized loyalty and memecoins can supercharge user
adoption by rewarding engagement in fun, tangible ways. Though challenges persist,
regulatory uncertainty, user experience, merchant education, the foundational
trend is clear. As blockchain networks improve and stable coins become more trusted, crypto
transactions are inching closer to mainstream. When the average consumer can buy groceries or
pay bills instantly with a digital wallet, backed by stable, globally recognized tokens,
we'll know commerce defy has arrived. And if e-commerce taught us anything, it's that once consumers see an easier,
cheaper, and more rewarding way to transact, adoption follows fast.
About Carter Raising Carter as a product and technology leader with 8 plus years in Web 2
and Web 3, blending deep technical expertise with entrepreneurial success.
As a former co-founder of Dropchain and current product
lead at Spree, he has driven innovations in tokenomics, protocol design, and blockchain
engineering. A National Science Foundation research graduate turned serial entrepreneur,
Carter combines vision and proven expertise to shape the future of blockchain with Spree Finance.
About Spree Finance Spree is a next-generation commerce and rewards platform that enables humans-on-die agents to
seamlessly spend crypto on everyday goods, services, and exclusive experiences, starting
with travel and experiential verticals. Spree combines payments, loyalty, and financing into
one integrated Web2 and Web3 solution. With access to over 2M Web 2 merchants and a growing network of curated
experiences, Spree makes commerce easy while unlocking savings, rewards, and exclusive
money-can't-buy opportunities. Follow Spree.
https://ex.com. SpreeFinance, info
This article is published under HackerNoons business blogging program.
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