Rain's CEO and co-founder, Farooq Malik, sat down with Jacquelyn from Talking Tokens during the Wyoming Blockchain Symposium in Jackson Hole to unpack all things stablecoins, tokenized money, and Rain’s role in building the future of payments.
You can listen to the full episode here.
Farooq’s conversation offered a clear view into how stablecoins are evolving from niche assets into mainstream financial infrastructure. Below are the top takeaways from the discussion:
Issuing a stablecoin is only step one—the true test is whether people can actually use it. Billions of dollars sit in stablecoins today, but Rain is focused on turning them into money you can use anywhere Visa is accepted.
Stablecoins, CBDCs, and tokenized deposits all point toward the same reality: tokenized money. By combining payment and reconciliation into a single process, tokenization solves inefficiencies that have long plagued traditional banking and payments.
Rain’s approach isn’t about changing consumer behavior—it’s about upgrading the backend. Just like mobile phones and streaming services reshaped industries without altering user habits overnight, Rain makes stablecoins “just another currency."
Rain has spent years preparing for regulatory clarity—and now that it’s here, interest is surging. From global banks to state governments like Wyoming with its new Frontier Stable Token, institutions are exploring how tokenized money can improve efficiency and broaden access.
Farooq emphasized that openness will define the future of payments. Rain’s APIs and infrastructure allow banks, fintechs, and enterprises to integrate stablecoins or tokenized deposits seamlessly, scaling across borders with a single partner.
Farooq closed with a simple reminder: “Always believe the world could be better.” Stablecoins and tokenized money aren’t just about efficiency—they’re about building a financial system that works faster, costs less, and includes more people.