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Google Cloud enters $30 trillion payments race with blockchain ledger GCUL

Google Cloud has stepped into financial technology with the launch of its new blockchain platform, Google Cloud Universal Ledger (GCUL).

The system, currently in private testing, is designed to speed up and reduce the cost of global payments, while aiming to challenge established players such as Ripple, Circle, and Stripe.

The move comes as stablecoin transaction volumes reached $30 trillion in 2024, highlighting the growing demand for blockchain-based financial infrastructure.

Google is positioning GCUL as a neutral, compliance-friendly solution for financial institutions, with a commercial rollout planned as early as 2026.

Google Cloud’s blockchain GCUL targets financial institutions

GCUL has been introduced as a Layer 1 blockchain built specifically for financial services.

Google Cloud’s head of Web3 strategy, Rich Widmann, described the ledger as an infrastructure tool for banks, payment processors, and intermediaries that want to modernise their operations without maintaining complex systems.

The platform supports Python-based smart contracts, offering institutions the ability to automate payments and integrate digital assets.

Google has stressed three main features: simplicity, by offering a single API for multiple currencies; flexibility, through scalable smart contracts; and safety, via a permissioned, compliance-driven environment that requires KYC-verified accounts.

Some in the crypto sector have raised concerns, suggesting GCUL resembles a consortium chain rather than a fully decentralised network.

Google has responded by emphasising that its focus is on security, compliance, and institutional adoption rather than catering to retail cryptocurrency users.

Competing with Ripple, Circle, and Stripe in payments

The timing of GCUL’s introduction places Google Cloud in direct competition with other blockchain-based payment initiatives.

Ripple continues to expand its XRP-powered cross-border remittance services, Circle has recently launched its own blockchain Arc, and Stripe is testing its Tempo system for developers.

The payments race reflects the scale of the opportunity.

Traditional payment firms handled significantly lower transaction volumes in 2024, with PayPal processing $1.6 trillion and Visa handling $13 trillion.

In contrast, stablecoin volumes far outpaced them, reaching $30 trillion last year.

Google hopes to capture a share of this fast-growing market by offering financial institutions lower fees, 24/7 settlement, and built-in compliance features.

Unlike rivals that push their own tokens, Google has presented GCUL as a neutral platform open to different financial players.

Its design as a permissioned ledger aims to balance regulatory expectations with the efficiencies of blockchain.

Partnership with CME Group and testing timeline

Google unveiled GCUL in March alongside CME Group, one of the largest derivatives marketplaces globally.

CME is already testing tokenisation and wholesale payment applications on the platform.

The first testing phase has been completed, and broader institutional trials are planned later this year.

If the trials prove successful, GCUL could see an official launch in 2026, marking Google Cloud’s entry into a multi-trillion-dollar payments market.

The collaboration with CME Group signals Google’s strategy of aligning with established financial institutions rather than directly competing with them.

This approach could allow GCUL to scale adoption more quickly than blockchain projects that focus on consumer use cases.

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