Russia plans to rollout their digital ruble in September.
America doesn’t need to wait.
Telcoin’s eUSD is already live — a real, regulated, 1:1 backed US dollar issued by a U.S. bank.
This month the DTCC begins limited production of tokenized assets on blockchain, with full commercial rollout coming in October.
While others are still building…
America’s infrastructure is already turning on.
XRP bridges between currencies.
eUSD brings the actual USD on-chain.
The timing is not a coincidence.
$TEL $XRP #Telcoin #eUSD #DTCC
XRP bridges between currencies.
$TEL bridges directly to the USD itself.
This month, the DTCC begins limited production trading of tokenized securities on blockchain. Full commercial rollout is scheduled for October.
The DTCC currently processes over $2 quadrillion in transactions annually — one of the largest settlement systems in the world.
As trillions in real institutional assets start moving on-chain, having a regulated U.S. bank-issued digital dollar like Telcoin’s eUSD becomes extremely valuable.
XRP = bridge between currencies
eUSD = direct bridge to the actual USD
The infrastructure pieces are falling into place.
$TEL $XRP #Telcoin #XRP #eUSD
@samuel_ric5149 Ripple is a business
Banks won't use a 3rd party.
"lost the headers and transaction data for its first 32,569 ledgers in 2012 due to a server bug."
Alfred E Newman in my head
"Wot me worry"
Paul Neuner (@telcoin CEO) absolutely cooking on the “Who Should Be Allowed to Issue Money?” panel at DC Blockchain Summit 2026
• Banks, fintechs & regulators aligning on blockchain
• How smaller players can actually participate in stablecoin issuance
• Telcoin’s vision for eUSD & blockchain as the rails of money
This panel (with Kyle Hauptman Chairman of the NCUA Board & others) is pure signal. Digital cash. 🏦 ethereum:0x467bccd9d29f223bce8043b84e8c8b282827790f
Good morning TEL community! ☕
Patrick Gerhart, President of Banking Ops at Telcoin, just dropped some strong updates. Telcoin is the only US bank-regulated and GENIUS Act compliant on/off ramp — and users can now open a real U.S. bank account straight inside the Telcoin Wallet.
This is real utility being built.
Watch here: https://t.co/UilHgCKEl5
What do you think about these developments? 👇
DTCC is about to move quadrillions in tokenized assets — and they just confirmed it’s not a test run. It starts this month.
Telcoin is the only US-regulated on-chain bank with real bank accounts already live in the app. When that flood of institutional money hits, TEL’s position gets very interesting.
$1 might not be as far-fetched as people think.
Good morning, TEL fam! 🌅
We’re sitting at the perfect entry point — just a hair over two-tenths of a cent — while Telcoin just dropped the first regulated on-chain bank accounts straight into the wallet. That’s not hype, that’s real banking on your phone.
The infrastructure’s built, the charter’s secured, and Mainnet’s coming. The seeds we planted years ago are sprouting right now.
Patience is paying off. Let’s keep stacking while the world catches up.
What a time to be a TEL holder. ☕📈
Not financial advice — DYOR
Starlink Mobile is turning heads today, and one possibility jumps out: what if #Telcoin became the telecom-native money layer Starlink would otherwise have to build?
Soon, #Starlink will no longer be just satellite internet.
With direct-to-phone capabilities expanding and consumer mobile ambitions becoming more obvious, it is moving toward something with a very different cost structure, reach, and strategic posture than legacy carriers.
That lines up unusually well with what Telcoin was designed for.
Telcoin was never just another retail crypto app. It was built around mobile operators, regulated digital cash, and blockchain settlement. Telcoin Digital Asset Bank now bridges traditional funds into eUSD Digital Cash, while Telcoin Network is structured for GSMA-style operator participation.
Legacy carriers could integrate something like this, but they would be bolting it onto decades of billing systems, roaming agreements, vendor stacks, and internal inertia.
Starlink gets to build with far more flexibility from the ground up.
That is where the idea gets interesting.
Imagine a phone that works in rural areas, at sea, across borders, or in places legacy networks barely reach.
Now imagine that same mobile environment also supports top-ups, remittances, roaming settlement, and peer-to-peer value transfer through regulated Digital Cash.
No more dead zones separating connectivity from actual economic utility.
This fits the Musk playbook: reduce dependence on legacy infrastructure.
Starlink did it for broadband. A native money layer at the edge of the network would do something similar for finance, especially for remote users, maritime workers, truckers, diaspora families, and anyone whose phone is already their primary financial device.
The mutual fit is obvious.
Starlink brings distribution, hardware, network ambition, and a global user base.
Telcoin brings licensed banking infrastructure, stablecoin settlement, and a telecom-native architecture that a new mobile player would otherwise need to build or acquire.
The obvious wrinkle is X payments. Why partner when Musk already has a payments roadmap elsewhere?
Fair question.
But compliant, multi-jurisdictional money movement with operator-level integration is not trivial. Telcoin already has pieces in place that are directly relevant to this exact problem.
No signs this is happening.
But @TelcoinPaul, please :)
This one feels too obvious to ignore.
#StarlinkMobile #Telcoin telcoin:native
Came across an interesting @telcoin potential use case on telegram. Imagine if MNO'S routed their customer mobile payments through the $tel #telcoin network? Just 50 million users at say $80 payment is $8 billion each month. Just a thought.
@kengibble@telcoin@TelcoinPaul becaue you go on and on and fuking on...
Can you walk into the Telbank if you have a problem?
Noooo
so ""Submit a support ticket." and will get processed
You got better idea Einstien