/payments

News and resources on payments systems, innovations and initiatives worldwide.

X gains payment licences in seven US states

X, the social media platform formerly know as Twitter, has obtained money transmitter licences from seven US states over the past month.

  10 Be the first to comment

X gains payment licences in seven US states

Editorial

This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community.

After his $43 billion takeover of Twitter in April, the world's richest man, Elon Musk, outlined his ambitions to transform the platform into a financial super app, along the lines of Chinese social media app WeChat.

In a gathering on Spaces, Musk mused on an idea to emulate his first business Paypal, creating the infrastructure for Twitter to process payments, complete with connected debit cards and bank accounts.

The new payment licences from the states of Arizona, Georgia, Mayland, Michigan, Missouri, New Hampshire and Rhode Island are among the first steps to be taken to realise this vision.

Musk has said that he envisions users connecting their online bank accounts to the social media service, with the company moving later into “debit cards, checks and whatnot.”

Twitter has previously nibbled around the edges of financial services, adding a tipping feature for users to reward creators on the platform and enabling people to charge subscription fees for exclusive content, like newsletters.

In April, the company rolled out a feature that will let users access stocks, cryptocurrencies and other financial assets through a partnership with eToro.

The recent rebranding of Twitter as X Corp, in a reference to PayPal's early days when it was known as X.com, is a further nudge in the general direction of travel.

Sponsored [Webinar] 2025 Fraud Trends: Synthetic Identity, AI and Incoming Mandates

Related Company

X

Keywords

Comments: (0)

[Webinar] Unifying Card Programmes: The cost-reduction imperativeFinextra Promoted[Webinar] Unifying Card Programmes: The cost-reduction imperative