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What Is Converge Blockchain

Institutional RWA L1 with USDe and USDtb as native gas tokens

Written by Eco
What is Converge Blockchain? Securitize × Ethena Chain

Converge is a public, EVM-compatible Layer 1 announced by Securitize and Ethena Labs in March 2025, designed to host tokenized real-world assets and the sUSDe yield economy on a single, compliance-aware execution layer. Both USDe and USDtb are native gas tokens, and Converge ships with institutional KYC/AML hooks that blue-chip RWA issuers like BlackRock's BUIDL and Apollo's ACRED already use through Securitize. Updated May 2026.

What is Converge blockchain?

Converge is a settlement chain co-built by Securitize, the SEC-registered transfer agent behind BlackRock's BUIDL fund, and Ethena Labs, issuer of the $3.9B USDe synthetic dollar. It targets one workload: tokenized treasuries, equities, and credit funds settling against onchain stablecoin yield, on an EVM L1 where USDe and USDtb pay gas instead of ETH.

The chain was announced jointly on the ethena.fi blog and via Securitize press in March 2025. Securitize brings the regulated rails (transfer agency, broker-dealer, fund administration); Ethena brings the liquidity layer (USDe at $3.9B circulating and USDtb at $635M, per DeFiLlama as of Q2 2026). The pitch is narrow: an L1 where a tokenized BUIDL share and an sUSDe yield position can sit in the same wallet, settle in the same block, and clear KYC at the asset layer rather than the application layer.

Who is behind Converge?

Converge is a joint project between Securitize and Ethena Labs, with backing from the existing investor bases of both companies. Securitize is the transfer agent for BlackRock's BUIDL tokenized treasury fund and is registered with the SEC as a broker-dealer and transfer agent. Ethena Labs issues USDe and the institutional-grade USDtb stablecoin.

Securitize's role is the institutional anchor. The firm is the registered transfer agent for BlackRock's BUIDL fund, which crossed $1B in tokenized treasury AUM in 2024, and it administers tokenized funds for Apollo (ACRED), Hamilton Lane, and KKR. Ethena Labs is the issuer behind USDe, a synthetic dollar that uses delta-neutral hedging to hold its peg, and USDtb, a more conservative stablecoin backed primarily by BlackRock's BUIDL itself. Ethena's staked USDe (sUSDe) distributes the yield from those hedged positions to holders.

The pairing is mechanical, not just narrative: Ethena buys BUIDL through Securitize for the USDtb reserve, and Securitize's regulated investor base needs onchain dollar yield to deploy capital into. Converge is the chain where those two flows meet.

How does Converge work?

Converge is an EVM-compatible Layer 1 where USDe and USDtb are native gas assets. Validators settle blocks denominated in stablecoins rather than a volatile native token, and the execution layer ships with built-in identity and compliance primitives so that regulated assets like BUIDL or ACRED can move without bolt-on permissioning at the application layer.

Three design choices distinguish it from a generic EVM L1:

  • Stablecoin-denominated gas. Transactions are paid in USDe or USDtb. An institution holding tokenized treasuries does not need to source ETH or a volatile L1 token to move assets.

  • Compliance-native execution. The chain exposes identity and transfer-restriction primitives at the protocol level, so a Reg D security token enforces holder rules without each application reimplementing whitelists.

  • sUSDe as the default yield curve. Ethena's staked USDe is the reference dollar yield on Converge, available to applications as a base rate for lending markets, fixed-income products, and tokenized fund cash sweeps.

EVM compatibility means Solidity contracts, MetaMask, and standard tooling work without rewrites, which keeps the integration cost low for the lending venues, DEXs, and structured-product issuers Converge needs to bootstrap.

What does Converge do differently from other RWA chains?

Converge differs from generic RWA chains by tying its identity, gas, and yield layers to a single regulated transfer agent (Securitize) and a single stablecoin issuer (Ethena). Most RWA chains rely on third-party issuers for compliance and bridge in dollars. Converge co-locates the issuer, the cash leg, and the compliance layer on one L1.

The contrast is sharpest with Plasma, the Tether-aligned stablecoin L1 covered in our explainer on Plasma blockchain. Plasma optimizes for stablecoin payments at scale: zero-fee USDT transfers, Bitcoin-anchored security, consumer remittance and merchant settlement as the headline use case. Converge optimizes for institutional asset issuance and yield: KYC at the protocol level, BUIDL and ACRED as native instruments, sUSDe as the reference rate. Both are stablecoin-native L1s; they target different sides of the dollar economy.

Compared to general-purpose execution layers like Monad or MegaETH, Converge is narrower by design. It is not a throughput contest. It is a permissioned-asset settlement venue dressed in EVM clothing.

What are USDe and USDtb on Converge?

USDe is Ethena's synthetic dollar, holding peg through delta-neutral hedging across staked ETH and perpetual futures. USDtb is Ethena's institutional stablecoin, backed primarily by BlackRock's BUIDL tokenized treasury fund. On Converge, both serve as native gas tokens, replacing ETH or a volatile L1 token for transaction fees.

Per DeFiLlama as of Q2 2026, USDe circulating supply is $3.9B and USDtb is $635M. The two stablecoins serve different audiences: USDe for crypto-native users seeking yield through sUSDe, USDtb for institutions and treasury desks that want a stablecoin whose reserves sit in a registered tokenized money market fund. Using both as gas means Converge does not force a single risk profile on every transaction; an Apollo ACRED holder can pay gas in USDtb without ever touching a synthetic asset.

For broader context on the yield mechanism, see our explainer on how sUSDe works.

What is the launch timeline?

Converge was announced in March 2025 with testnet planned for 2025 and mainnet targeted for 2026. Specific dates have not been published in the joint announcement; treat any single-week date claims as unverified. Ethena and Securitize have indicated phased onboarding, with sUSDe and USDtb live at genesis and additional RWA issuers added over time.

The cautious framing is deliberate. Pre-launch L1s routinely slip; the credible signal is not the date but the integration roster at testnet, which determines whether mainnet ships with real liquidity or with empty contracts. For canonical timing, refer back to the Ethena blog and Securitize press.

How does Converge fit into the broader stablecoin L1 landscape?

Converge sits in a 2025-2026 wave of stablecoin-aligned L1s where the chain's economics are denominated in dollars rather than a volatile native token. Plasma anchors the payments end (zero-fee USDT, Bitcoin security). Converge anchors the institutional RWA end (USDe and USDtb gas, Securitize-issued assets, sUSDe yield). Both bypass the assumption that an L1 needs its own speculative token to function.

The shared thesis: stablecoins are the dominant onchain asset, and a chain that treats them as first-class citizens (gas, settlement, yield) captures a workload that generic EVM L1s underserve. Where Converge bets uniquely is that the institutional side of that workload, tokenized treasuries and credit funds, needs compliance baked into the chain rather than bolted on. For the full survey, see our pillar on stablecoin L1 chains.

How does Converge compare to Plasma?

Converge and Plasma are both stablecoin-native L1s announced in 2025, but they target opposite ends of the dollar economy. Plasma is Tether-aligned and optimizes for high-volume USDT payments with zero fees and Bitcoin-anchored security. Converge is Securitize and Ethena-aligned and optimizes for tokenized RWAs with USDe/USDtb gas and protocol-level KYC.

The split is summarized below.

Dimension

Converge

Plasma

Backers

Securitize, Ethena Labs

Tether-aligned, Bitfinex investors

Native gas

USDe, USDtb

USDT (zero-fee for transfers)

Primary workload

Tokenized RWAs + sUSDe yield

Stablecoin payments + remittance

Compliance model

Protocol-level KYC/AML

Application-level

Security anchor

EVM L1 consensus

Bitcoin-anchored

Status (Q2 2026)

Pre-mainnet

Pre-mainnet / early mainnet

For a deeper look at Plasma's design, see what is Plasma blockchain. Both chains are unproven at scale; treat the comparison as a thesis split, not a benchmark.

What does Converge mean for tokenized treasuries?

Converge gives tokenized treasury issuers a single venue where the asset, the cash leg, and the compliance layer share one execution environment. A BUIDL or ACRED token can settle against USDtb on Converge without crossing a third-party bridge or relying on application-level whitelists, which shortens the operational chain that institutional desks have to underwrite.

The tokenized treasury market crossed material AUM in 2024 (BUIDL alone passed $1B), and growth is constrained less by demand than by the operational friction of moving regulated assets across general-purpose chains. Converge's bet is that issuers will consolidate on a chain that handles compliance natively. Whether that bet pays out depends on how many issuers Securitize can route through Converge versus competing venues. For the broader RWA context, see our explainer on tokenized treasuries.

How does Eco fit in?

Eco Routes is a stablecoin-native intent layer that abstracts cross-chain transfers across 15+ chains, including the emerging stablecoin L1 set. As Converge moves from testnet to mainnet, the routing question for applications is the same one Plasma raises: how to move USDe, USDtb, and tokenized assets in and out of the chain without forcing every user to learn a new bridge UX.

Eco's role is to absorb that complexity at the orchestration layer, so an application building on Converge can quote a transfer in stablecoin terms without exposing the underlying route. The Converge mainnet integration timeline depends on launch readiness; for the current chain set, see eco.com.

Sources and methodology. Stablecoin supplies pulled from DeFiLlama in Q2 2026 (USDe $3.9B, USDtb $635M). Project background verified against ethena.fi blog, securitize.io press, and BlackRock press releases. Launch dates are pre-mainnet and subject to change; treat single-week date claims as unverified.

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