Key Takeaways:
- The Borderless Benchmark Q1 2026 report analyzed 1.15 million rate observations across 51 currencies.
- East Africa’s KES, TZS, and RWF pricing gaps compressed 60-81% as multi-provider competition intensified in Q1 2026.
- Zambia’s ZMW widened 701 bps in five weeks, signaling frontier corridor volatility will shape Q2 2026 operations.
Borderless Benchmark Q1 2026: Brazil Real Hits 0 bps Execution Cost, Kenya Tightens 81%
The report, built on 1,147,767 rate observations across 51 currencies and 90 calendar days on the Borderless network, divides the stablecoin foreign exchange market into three tiers: corridors that have reached institutional-grade pricing, corridors in active price discovery, and corridors with sell-side data only.
LATAM sits in the first tier. The Brazilian real recorded a 0 bps quoted execution cost from multiple providers across two consecutive months. Mexico, Colombia, and Chile held within 22 bps of interbank rates throughout the quarter, per the Borderless Benchmark Quarterly Insights: Q1 2026 report. The region’s execution cost moved in a 6 bps band the entire period.
The Argentine peso remains an outlier. Capital controls kept its stablecoin premium between 473 and 596 bps all quarter. The Congo franc held near 3,500 bps due to a dual exchange rate regime. Both are flagged as parallel market currencies in the report.
Africa tells a more varied story. The Borderless Benchmark Quarterly Insights: Q1 2026 report shows the Kenyan shilling pricing gap fell from 176 bps in January to 33 bps by March, an 81% compression. Tanzania‘s shilling dropped from 340 bps to 68 bps, an 80% reduction. Rwanda’s franc fell from 181 bps to 72 bps, a 60% decline. All three corridors carried deep multi-provider competition throughout the quarter.
Where competition was limited, pricing gaps held or widened. South Africa’s rand went from 66 bps to 121 bps. Ghana‘s cedi, tracked as a parallel market currency, finished March at 616 bps with only two providers quoting buy and sell rates.
Nigeria‘s stablecoin premium dropped 193 bps across Q1, moving from 335 bps in January to 142 bps in March. The Borderless Benchmark Quarterly Insights: Q1 2026 report attributes the shift partly to a new provider entering the corridor in February, which briefly widened the pricing gap to 221 bps before tightening to 41 bps the following month.
Frontier corridors showed the sharpest within-month swings. Zambia’s kwacha widened 701 bps across five weeks in March, moving from 297 bps to 998 bps. The West African franc swung 298 bps in the same period. A payments operation running on a fixed monthly disbursement schedule in ZMW would have executed at a 3.4x cost range inside a single month, the report notes.
Across 28 currencies in APAC, the Middle East, and Europe, with sell-rate data only, every corridor tracked within 20 bps of interbank mid-rates. The median sell-side premium was negative 4 bps. The Philippine peso and euro are the only corridors outside LATAM and Africa with full bid-ask data available in the dataset.
Borderless to Expand Provider Network in Apac, the Middle East, and Europe
The Borderless Benchmark Quarterly Insights: Q1 2026 report tracked the median stablecoin premium between 37 and 51 bps all quarter. The number of currencies within 100 bps of traditional interbank mid-rates grew from 10 in January to 14 by March.
USDC and USDT remained functionally equivalent for FX purposes. The median spread between the two assets held at 0 bps every month of the quarter.
Borderless.xyz is expanding its provider network in APAC, the Middle East, and Europe. As providers come online in those corridors, the Borderless Benchmark Quarterly Insights series will add full execution cost and pricing gap analysis to replace the current sell-only data.
Q2 will test whether East Africa’s pricing compression continues, whether sell-only corridors develop two-sided liquidity, and whether frontier markets like ZMW stabilize or continue showing regime-level pricing shifts week to week.
