Sui announced an integration with Remi Technology to support bank-issued regulated stablecoin payments on its blockchain, marking a push to bring tokenized settlement deeper into traditional financial workflows.
Remi Technology, a global cross-border clearing and settlement infrastructure provider, will use Sui to support transfers of Bison Bank-issued EUB and USB e-money tokens.
According to Sui, the tokens are structured under Europe’s MiCA framework and will be available through Bison Bank and participating partner banks across Europe, Asia, Latin America, the Middle East and North America.
Stablecoins move into bank workflows
The integration is designed to bring stablecoin-based clearing into existing bank systems, allowing participating institutions to send and receive EUB and USB stablecoins through existing banking channels without relying on offshore custodians or separate crypto rails.
The model is aimed at licensed financial institutions that want faster cross-border transfers while keeping auditability, compliance controls and balance-sheet treatment inside regulated banking structures.
Bison Bank, which is authorized and supervised by the European Central Bank, issues the EUB and USB tokens as regulated e-money tokens under MiCA.
Sui becomes the settlement layer
For Sui, the integration adds another payments use case as blockchains compete to become infrastructure for regulated financial activity. Sui said its object-centric design and programmable infrastructure will support point-to-point settlement at predictable costs.
The network is built to align with MiCA, Financial Action Task Force standards and Basel Committee requirements, while embedding risk controls and the FATF Travel Rule into transactions. Remi also said its messaging and interfaces are SWIFT-compatible, a feature aimed at helping banks adapt the system across jurisdictions.
Adeniyi Abiodun, co-founder and chief product officer of Mysten Labs, said Remi had built relationships with regulated international banks, calling it a step “few fintech infrastructure providers have achieved.”
Banks remain the main target
Remi CEO Sam Su said institutions moving money across borders need infrastructure built to institutional standards, adding that Remi was designed to meet the compliance requirements of major financial institutions while Sui provides “the blockchain capabilities to match.”
The launch comes as regulated stablecoins move closer to traditional finance, with banks and infrastructure providers looking for ways to use tokenized settlement without stepping outside existing compliance and supervisory frameworks.
