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Sling Money è ora Morse. Scopri perché abbiamo cambiato il nostro nome.

Sling Money is now Morse – and can do a whole lot more

Di Mike Hudack, CEO and Co-founder

We believe financial access should be global, instant and low cost. Today we're taking two big steps towards making that a reality:

  • We're changing our name from Sling to Morse (because Morse code powered the first global financial network)
  • Very soon, we're launching investing in US stocks and ETFs for people in over 150 countries, as well as gradually rolling out a number of other features

We've outgrown our name

When we started, Sling was built around one thing: sending money from person to person. That was the right place to start. But it was never where we intended to stop.

Today people around the world – in Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Peru, Kenya, Uganda, Zambia and Indonesia to name just a few – get their salaries paid into Morse.

People throughout Latin America use the Morse Card to spend anywhere in the world, with no foreign transaction fees or exchange rate markup.

Mexican-Americans use Morse to send money home to family in Mexico. Ugandans use Morse to support family members attending university in Europe.

And very soon, people all over the world will use Morse to grow their money by investing in companies like Apple, Nvidia and Microsoft.

We're not just slinging money anymore – we're a place where people around the world can save, spend, send and invest – and we needed a name that reflects that.

Why Morse?

More than 150 years ago, Morse code powered the earliest global financial network – transmitting stock quotes across trading floors, sending and receiving news, making trades, and moving money.

It was the original financial network more than a century before the internet. This history – combined with the size of our ambition – is why we're becoming Morse.

As well as investments, we're rolling out a number of other features

  1. Morse users will be able to send money directly to bank accounts and mobile money wallets around the world. We're starting with Pix in Brazil and then expanding. Sending money to others on Morse stays free and takes around three seconds on average. Sending straight to someone's bank account will be super fast and competitively priced.
  2. We're expanding the options to get paid in Morse. In addition to US bank details, Pix keys, and CLABEs, we're transitioning our European IBANs to be in our users' own names. We're also adding support for receiving blockchain payments on a variety of blockchains beyond Solana.
  3. The Morse Visa Card is coming to more countries. We're expanding to about a hundred countries over the course of 2026. And we'll soon start shipping physical cards to customers in the United States, Latin America and elsewhere.
  4. We'll help Morse users grow their savings by rolling out access to tokenized US Treasuries and other high-quality, yield-bearing instruments – everywhere regulation allows.

Morse is now multiple accounts in one

We've redesigned the app to support all of these features and we're releasing it gradually over the coming days.

We're now so much more than sending money from person to person. Morse is receiving your paycheck, saving it, investing it, spending it, and sending it.

Our mission is to connect everyone in the world to a global financial network – instantly and at low cost

It shouldn't matter where you were born, where you grew up, or where you live. It shouldn't matter what you do for a living or what kind of phone you have.

You should be able to get paid by any company in the world. You should be able to invest in the S&P 500 Index, instantly. You should be able to send and receive money from anyone, anywhere.

Wherever you are, whoever you are – the signal should get through. And I could not be more proud to be building this here, with you.

— Mike Hudack, CEO and Co-founder