Shiga Digital Holdings Limited continued to refine its positioning this week as a provider of stablecoin-based infrastructure for corporate treasury, cross-border payments, and FX risk management. The company’s latest communications emphasized the inefficiencies of legacy payment rails, citing week‑long delays that can disrupt liquidity and time‑sensitive opportunities.
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Shiga is promoting a platform that allows businesses to on‑ramp local currencies into USDT, then use those balances for savings, treasury, and multi-currency transfers in EUR, GBP, USD, and other fiat currencies. The firm stresses near real-time settlement and a single dashboard to manage balances across jurisdictions, contrasting this with conventional international wires that can take several days.
The company also highlighted features tailored to larger or more complex users, including a personalized OTC desk for transactions above $20,000 and human support for high-value transfers. These services are presented as a higher-touch alternative to purely automated dashboards and as a way to support corporates with recurring, high-volume cross-border flows.
In parallel, Shiga continued to focus on FX volatility and soft-currency risk in emerging markets, referencing recent swings in the Indian rupee and South African rand and liquidity pressures in cities such as Lagos, Jakarta, and São Paulo. Case studies centered on a Lagos-based pharmaceutical importer illustrate the operational and financial trade-offs of different FX strategies during periods of heightened market stress.
Across this messaging, stablecoin-based settlement is framed as a tool to reduce FX risk by offering more predictable value and flexible settlement terms for soft-currency exposures. Shiga is using thought-leadership content, newsletters, and direct engagement calls to educate finance teams on the hidden costs of payment delays and currency volatility, indicating an active client-acquisition drive.
For the company’s prospects, these developments underline a clear strategic focus on corporate and emerging-market clients rather than retail trading. If Shiga can scale adoption while managing regulatory and counterparty risks associated with stablecoins, its emphasis on speed, transparency, and FX risk management could support more stable, transaction-based revenue streams and deepen its role in digital payment and treasury infrastructure.

