Chainlink has become a participant in Project Pangea, a cross-border settlement initiative that brings together banks from Europe and South Korea. The combined assets managed by these institutions exceed $10 trillion. Despite the announcement, LINK’s price moved lower in the short term. At the time of reporting, the token was trading near $7.57, having dropped about 5% over the past 24 hours.
Project Pangea is a collaboration between Chainlink, FairSquareLab, UniKA, and Qivalis, aiming to test the use of regulated stablecoins denominated in euros and South Korean won for cross-border transactions between Europe and South Korea. The main goal is to speed up the traditional euro-won settlement process—typically completed on a T+2 basis—toward a T+0 model, which would mean near-instant settlement.
Qivalis is a consortium backed by 37 European banks and focuses on euro stablecoins, while UniKA is a South Korea-based banking alliance representing more than 10 commercial banks. The initiative seeks to enable foreign exchange transactions to be completed in near real-time, a significant leap from existing wait times.
Mini glossary: Payment versus payment is a settlement method designed to ensure payments in two different currencies occur simultaneously. In an atomic swap setup, both legs of a transaction must be completed, otherwise the entire transaction is canceled.
Within the project, Chainlink will provide crucial infrastructure to connect traditional banking systems with blockchain-based settlement networks. Its middleware solution is designed to translate Swift and ISO 20022 payment instructions into on-chain settlement commands, allowing banks to operate with blockchain networks without needing to overhaul their existing payment systems.
The project will employ Chainlink’s Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol, Data Streams, and Chainlink Runtime Environment. These tools are expected to support cross-chain transfers, deliver real-time exchange rate data, and coordinate settlements between Swift messages and blockchain settlement layers.
Meanwhile, FairSquareLab will provide on-chain foreign exchange settlement technology through the Pangea L1 Network, which will serve as the backbone for atomic FX swaps. This system ensures both sides of a currency exchange are completed simultaneously, and if either party fails to fulfill their obligations, the transaction is canceled to minimize risk.
The initiative focuses specifically on the Europe–South Korea trade corridor, where more than $150 billion in goods and services flow annually. While global foreign exchange markets see over $9.6 trillion in daily volume, a significant portion of cross-border settlements still rely on intermediaries and delayed payment mechanisms.
Chainlink has made it clear that this effort is not intended as direct competition to existing payment networks. Instead, the company aims to offer a bridge that links banks’ current systems to on-chain financial infrastructure. Regulated stablecoins will serve as the digital cash leg for settlement.
Despite the strategic developments, LINK’s short-term outlook remained weak. The token retreated from the $7.85–$7.90 range, moving toward the $7.50–$7.55 support zone. The first resistance barrier is positioned between $7.60 and $7.65. A stronger recovery would require LINK to regain the $7.80–$7.90 range.
ETF flow data also influenced the selling pressure. According to Arca, Chainlink’s spot ETF saw a net outflow of $490,920 on June 22. This ended a 203-day streak with no negative daily data. Total cumulative inflows slipped from $123.82 million to $123.33 million. On the technical side, the Relative Strength Index stood at 34.94 while MACD remained below zero. While this suggests a possible slowdown in the downward momentum, analysts point out that a definitive trend change would require stronger buying activity.
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