---
title: "Binance Reportedly Set to Lead Mesh’s $2B Round"
date: 2026-07-03
author: "Kathleen Kinder"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/binance-reportedly-set-to-lead-mesh-s-2b-round.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Investments"
    url: "/investments.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# Binance Reportedly Set to Lead Mesh’s $2B Round

Axios Pro reported July 2, 2026, that Binance is set to lead a new funding round for crypto payments company Mesh valuing it at up to $2 billion. Neither Binance nor Mesh has confirmed the round.

## Key Takeaways

- Binance is reportedly leading a new Mesh funding round at up to $2 billion, according to Axios Pro.
- Neither Binance nor Mesh has officially confirmed the round, first reported July 2, 2026 by Axios Pro’s Lucinda Shen.
- Mesh, a San Francisco payments network, closed a $75 million Series C at a $1 billion valuation in January 2026.
- Dragonfly Capital led that January round; Paradigm, Coinbase Ventures, SBI Investment, Liberty City Ventures, and Moderne Ventures also invested.
- Axios Pro ties the reported deal to the 2025 GENIUS Act, the US stablecoin law it says is driving demand for tokenized settlement rails.

## What Happened?

Axios Pro reported July 2, 2026, that Binance is set to lead a funding round for **Mesh**, a crypto payments and settlement company, that would value Mesh at up to **$2 billion**. Axios Pro fintech reporter **Lucinda Shen** bylined the story, citing sources close to the deal. Mesh’s existing investor roster already includes Coinbase’s venture arm from the January round.

The reported figure lands five months after Mesh closed a **$75 million Series C** on Jan. 27, 2026, that valued the company at $1 billion, according to Mesh’s own announcement. Dragonfly Capital led that round, with Paradigm, Moderne Ventures, Coinbase Ventures, SBI Investment, and Liberty City Ventures participating.

> Axios: Binance Plans to Lead Mesh’s New Funding Round at Up to $2B Valuation  
>   
> According to Axios, citing people familiar with the matter, crypto payments and settlement company Mesh is raising a new funding round at a valuation of up to $2 billion, with Binance planning to lead… [pic.twitter.com/Rfac1fFyIC](https://t.co/Rfac1fFyIC)
> 
> — Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) [July 3, 2026](https://x.com/WuBlockchain/status/2072889985918026063?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 The report attributes rising demand for settlement infrastructure to [last year’s GENIUS Act](https://coinlaw.io/genius-act-stablecoin-approval-framework/), which it says has driven an increase in tokenization efforts and greater demand for transfer mechanisms supporting both tokens and traditional currency, per Axios. GENIUS Act is the US federal law establishing a regulatory framework for dollar-backed stablecoins. As of publication, neither Binance nor Mesh had officially confirmed the deal, leaving the **$2 billion** figure a reported target, not a closed transaction.

The financing brought Mesh’s total funding to over $200 million. “**This round is a milestone**,” said **Bam Azizi**, Co-founder and CEO of Mesh, in the January announcement.

## Who Mesh Is and What It Connects?

Mesh describes itself as the first [global crypto payments network](https://coinlaw.io/cryptocurrency-payment-adoption-by-merchants-statistics/), connecting hundreds of exchanges, wallets, and financial platforms into a single, unified infrastructure layer so users can pay or get paid from any wallet, on any chain, anywhere. Mesh was formerly known as **Front Finance** and is headquartered in San Francisco, California.

That connective role is why the reported round draws more scrutiny than a typical late-stage raise. Mesh sits underneath rival platforms rather than competing with them directly, moving fiat and stablecoin value between exchanges, wallets, and card programs.

That valuation trajectory, on total funding still well short of the reported new target, would mark a steep markup for infrastructure that has not disclosed a comparable jump in revenue or user metrics.

## Implications for Crypto Settlement Infrastructure

A [Binance](https://coinlaw.io/binance-exchange-statistics/) lead stake puts a dominant crypto exchange inside settlement rails that also serve its direct competitors. Mesh’s own pitch as neutral connective infrastructure does not obviously answer that vertical-integration question.

Rival exchanges and wallets routing payments through Mesh would rely on the balance sheet and incentives of a competitor. Neither company has said what governance protections, if any, would accompany the investment.

The reported deal also lands inside a specific compliance window for Binance. The exchange settled with the **US Department of Justice and FinCEN** in November 2023; founder Changpeng Zhao received a presidential pardon in October 2025. Taken inside that window, a stake this large in US-touching payments infrastructure reads as capital redeployment into regulated rails, not as commentary on the deal’s valuation.

Axios Pro’s framing of the GENIUS Act as the catalyst points to a broader pattern. [Stablecoin regulation](https://coinlaw.io/us-treasury-stablecoin-rules-illicit-finance/) is now visibly redirecting where infrastructure investors put money, ahead of confirmation that any specific deal closes.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

The **$2 billion** headline number is unconfirmed, and that gap matters more than the figure itself. A near doubling of a private company’s valuation on a funding base still well short of the reported new target is the kind of markup that deserves confirmation before treatment as settled. Until Mesh or Binance issues its own statement, the accurate framing is “**reportedly in talks**,” not “**raised**.”

An official statement disclosing deal structure and any neutrality carve-outs, and how US regulators treat a Binance-led investment in stablecoin adjacent infrastructure inside the GENIUS Act’s implementation window is to watch next.

GENIUS Act clarity appears to be pulling exchange capital toward the settlement layer sitting underneath the exchanges themselves. Binance moving into that layer raises a neutrality question for every platform that depends on Mesh’s rails to move customer funds.

Definition of Blockchain. Link to full glossary entry follows the description.**Blockchain**A distributed digital ledger that records transactions across a network, with each block cryptographically linked to the previous one for security.

[Read more](https://coinlaw.io/glossary/blockchain/)