Utila Integrates TRON Resource Management, Offering Fintechs Up to 80% Reduction in Transaction Costs
TLDR: Utila now supports native TRX staking, wallet delegation, and energy rental within a single enterprise platform. TRON processes over $20 billion in daily transfers, making cost-efficient resource management critical for operators. Energy rental through JustLend and TronScan providers can cut single USDT transfer costs by up to 80%. The integration eliminates third-party signing systems, keeping compliance, visibility, and policy controls fully intact. Utila, an institutional-grade digital asset infrastructure platform, has launched native TRON resource management capabilities. The new integration allows users to stake TRX, delegate resources across wallets, and rent energy programmatically. It targets fintechs, payment companies, and exchanges on the TRON network. The solution reduces transaction costs while keeping security, policy controls, and transaction visibility intact. Streamlining TRON Resource Management for Enterprise Operations TRON serves as the dominant settlement layer for USDT, with a circulating supply of roughly $85 billion. Daily transfer volumes on the network regularly exceed $20 billion. For businesses where TRC-20 USDT forms a core payment flow, managing network resources efficiently is a direct operational priority. Every TRC-20 transfer on TRON requires energy and bandwidth to process. At high volumes, the cost of acquiring and allocating these resources adds up quickly. Utila’s new capabilities bring staking, delegation, and energy rental into one unified platform. .@utila_io, an institutional-grade digital asset infrastructure platform, announced the launch of native TRON resource management capabilities within its platform. The integration enables users to stake TRX, the native utility token of the TRON network, delegate resources across… pic.twitter.com/pkKevsa8sw — TRON DAO (@trondao) March 25, 2026 Previously, managing these resources at scale often meant routing transactions through third-party signing systems. Those systems ...
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