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TRON’s stablecoin network has quietly become one of the most important stablecoin settlement layers in crypto, with $85 billion in circulating USDT and $21 billion in daily transfer volume. What it has lacked until now was a clean bridge to the broader DeFi ecosystem that most builders and users operate in. That gap has closed.
LI.FI, the multichain liquidity aggregator that handles cross-chain bridging and swapping for a significant portion of DeFi’s active applications, has integrated TRON into its orchestration layer. The practical consequence is straightforward: developers building on LI.FI can route through TRON’s liquidity without managing a separate bridge integration, and users of applications built on the protocol can bridge and swap stablecoins in and out of TRON directly within the interface they already use.
That frictionless access matters because TRON’s stablecoin infrastructure has historically operated somewhat in parallel to the Ethereum-centric DeFi ecosystem that has largely been invisible to the wallets, aggregators, and protocols that define most users’ DeFi experience.
The practical capabilities of the LI.FI integration fall into two distinct categories.
TRON has historically required separate bridge integrations to connect with other chains, creating technical friction that pushed many builders toward ecosystems with simpler cross-chain tooling—even when TRON’s liquidity and fee structure were attractive. With the LI.FI integration, applications building on LI.FI’s API can route through TRON’s deep USDT liquidity directly, accessing one of crypto’s largest stablecoin ecosystems through the same interface they already use for Ethereum, Arbitrum, or other supported networks.
For users, the change is designed to be invisible. Stablecoin swaps and bridges involving TRON become available within the applications they already use, without requiring knowledge of which underlying chain handles settlement. The integration also supports improved pricing and liquidity access by connecting TRON’s $85 billion USDT pool to a routing layer that optimizes across multiple venues simultaneously.
Separately, TRX is maintaining an uptrend structure. Price is currently pressing into the $0.33–$0.34 region, a level that has repeatedly acted as resistance since the late-2025 peak. The weekly chart shows higher lows intact, with price climbing above the 50-week and 100-week moving averages, both of which continue to slope upward.
After pulling back from the ~$0.36 local high, TRX found support near the $0.27–$0.29 range. It then consolidated above the 50-week moving average before pushing higher again. This base-building phase appears to have reset momentum without breaking the broader trend, which is typically a sign of strength rather than exhaustion.
However, the current test is not trivial. The $0.34 area is described as a clear supply zone where prior rallies stalled. The latest move into this region has not been accompanied by a meaningful expansion in volume, which increases the likelihood of short-term hesitation or another rejection before a clean breakout.
If TRX can establish acceptance above $0.34, the next logical target is near the $0.38–$0.40 range. If it fails to break through, price may continue rotating between $0.28 and $0.34, extending consolidation within an otherwise intact uptrend.
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