02 Jun, 2025

Ripple’s Stablecoin, RLUSD, Gets Stamp of Approval in Dubai

Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin will support the Dubai Land Department’s blockchain initiative to tokenize real estate title deeds on the XRP Ledger.

The Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA), the financial regulator in charge of the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC), has approved Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin.

Following the approval, DIFC companies can now use the RLUSD stablecoin for various virtual asset services. These may include payments, treasury management and services.

The DIFC is a free economic zone and financial district that serves companies throughout the Middle East, Africa and South Asia. The financial zone had nearly 7,000 registered businesses by the end of 2024.

Under the DIFC’s crypto framework, only tokens recognized by the DFSA may be used across the district’s regulated ecosystem.

Ripple Sees “Huge Interest” From UAE Businesses

Ripple said businesses in the UAE are growing increasingly interested in crypto solutions. “The UAE’s digital economy is vibrant and incredibly dynamic,” said Reece Merrick, Ripple’s managing director for the Middle East and Africa.

“We’re seeing huge interest from businesses of all sizes for cross-border payments and digital asset custody solutions,” Merrick added.

Ripple said it is working with several local partners, including digital bank Zand and fintech platform Mamo, which are expected to be early adopters of the company’s regulated payment services.

In addition, Ripple said RLUSD will support the Dubai Land Department’s real estate tokenization initiative. The company said the project will record title deeds on the XRP Ledger.

On March 19, the Dubai Land Department (DLD) announced that it had started the pilot phase of its real-estate tokenization project. The project aims to be a registration entity implementing blockchain-based tokenization on property title deeds.

Crypto Complements Traditional Finance Solutions

When asked how stablecoins would compete with traditional financial systems, a Ripple spokesperson told Cointelegraph that the company sees blockchain and crypto as complementary to fiat systems.

However, the spokesperson added that traditional rails are not built for the real-time, global economy. The spokesperson said that this is where stablecoins play a role.

“Enterprise-grade, regulated stablecoins like RLUSD offer businesses a faster, cheaper, and more transparent alternative to traditional rails,” the spokesperson told Cointelegraph. “This is particularly true in markets where fiat liquidity is limited.”

Ripple emphasized that for adoption to scale, usability must match innovation. “Our customers don’t want to become crypto experts, they just want solutions that work,” the spokesperson added.

Ripple Expands Global Operations

The RLUSD stablecoin approval follows Ripple’s recent DFSA licensing. On March 13, the company said it had received a full license to operate in the DIFC.

RLUSD is among the few stablecoins globally approved under the DFSA’s crypto token regime and the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) Trust Company Charter. On Dec. 10, the NYDFS approved the stablecoin.

“RLUSD is issued under a NYDFS Trust Company Charter, which means this is our primary regulator,” the Ripple spokesperson told Cointelegraph, saying that the DFSA’s approval is a different form of regulatory oversight.

“It enables RLUSD to be integrated into virtual assets services by DFSA-licensed firms in the DIFC,” the spokesperson added.

Apart from the RLUSD stablecoin, the DFSA has recognized Circle-issued stablecoins USDC and EURC (EURC) and approved their use in the DIFC free economic zone.

04 Jun, 2025

JPMorgan to Offer Crypto ETF Financing, Considers Letting Clients Use Crypto as Loan Collateral

JPMorgan & Chase plans to expand some of its crypto offerings for trading and wealth-management clients as the United States regulatory environment warms to digital assets, Bloomberg reported, citing anonymous sources. The bank intends to let its clients use cryptocurrency assets as loan collateral for certain cryptocurrency exchange-traded funds (ETFs), including BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT). Previously, clients could only do so on a case-by-case basis. JPMorgan will also include a wealth-management client's crypto holdings when assessing their total net worth and liquid assets when determining the amount a client can borrow against their assets, according to the report. The expanded offerings for trading and wealth-management clients join other crypto-focused services JPMorgan plans to roll out this year. Just last month, crypto critic and JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said the firm will allow its customers to buy bitcoin, although the bank won't custody the asset.Beyond client offerings, the firm is helping other businesses broaden their reach in the crypto industry. In May, the stablecoin issuer Circle tapped JPMorgan to assist with its long-awaited initial public offering.BlackRock's IBIT is the largest spot bitcoin ETF with $69 billion in assets under management. Initially approved in January 2024 alongside 10 other funds, The Block's Data Dashboard indicates that IBIT now holds approximately 78% of the total spot bitcoin ETF market share.

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30 May, 2025

Why Emerging Markets Are the Next Frontier for Digital Payments: The Stablecoin Revolution

Across emerging markets in Latin America, Asia, and Africa, digital payment ecosystems are evolving at a rapid pace. Mobile-first consumers, high remittance volumes and growing demand for stable stores of value are converging to create fertile ground for financial innovation.One of the most promising developments in this space is the rise of stablecoins like USD Coin (USDC), a regulated, dollar-backed digital currency issued by Circle.With stablecoins like USDC now integrated into global payment infrastructures, cross-border payments are becoming faster, more accessible, and better suited to the needs of underserved markets. As regulatory frameworks mature and digital payment rails expand, stablecoins are emerging as a critical building block for the future of finance in emerging economies.Why Emerging Markets Are Ripe for Stablecoin InnovationEmerging markets share key characteristics that make them especially well-suited for stablecoin-driven transformation. Across Latin America, Asia, and Africa, many countries have large underbanked populations, volatile local currencies, and high costs associated with cross-border payments.At the same time, these same markets are rapidly embracing mobile-first financial solutions, often leapfrogging traditional banking infrastructure in favour of faster, more flexible digital platforms.This is where stablecoins offer a unique advantage. Unlike traditional cryptocurrencies, stablecoins are pegged 1:1 to fiat currencies, combining the speed and efficiency of blockchain technology with the stability and familiarity of traditional finance infrastructure.One of the most compelling benefits is the ability for individuals and businesses in non-USD economies to effectively hold a digital USD account. In many cases, this acts as a de facto savings account, protecting value against local currency depreciation. But the potential goes further: as stablecoin adoption accelerates, these wallets will increasingly enable direct cross-border payments. That means users could soon send and receive international payments from the same wallet, eliminating the need for double conversions and reducing the friction of sending outbound funds in a different currency.The result? Lower remittance fees, more efficient business payments, and a reliable digital alternative for storing and spending money, especially in economies where inflation and currency fluctuations are a daily concern.Regional Dynamics: One Challenge, Many SolutionsWhile the underlying drivers of stablecoin adoption are consistent across emerging markets, the specific conditions and opportunities vary by region.In Latin America, economic instability, inflation, and currency devaluation have accelerated the demand for dollar-based alternatives. Both consumers and businesses are turning to stablecoins not only for cross-border payments but also for local transactions and savings. Fintechs and mobile wallets in the region are increasingly integrating stablecoins like USDC to offer users a stable store of value and access to faster, lower-cost international transfers.In Southeast Asia, remittances make up a significant portion of the economy, with millions of migrant workers sending money home each month. These transfers are often routed through slow, expensive and opaque channels. Stablecoins can dramatically reduce both the cost and processing time of these transactions. With the region’s advanced mobile wallet ecosystems and real-time payment systems, stablecoins can integrate smoothly, enhancing, rather than replacing, the existing infrastructure.In Africa, limited access to traditional financial services has created one of the most mobile-first economies in the world. Mobile money platforms are widespread, providing an ideal foundation for stablecoin adoption. Here, stablecoins can enable small businesses, freelancers and everyday consumers to transact internationally, all through their mobile phones.Together, these regional dynamics highlight a shared conclusion: while user needs vary, the utility of stablecoins — particularly those that are regulated, trusted, and easy to integrate — extends across borders and use cases.Beyond Remittances: Expanding the Use CaseWhile cross-border remittances remain a core application, the use cases for stablecoins in emerging markets are quickly broadening.For businesses, stablecoins streamline payments, improve cash flow management, and reduce operational complexity.For governments and regulators, stablecoins offer a real-world sandbox to test and build future-ready digital infrastructure with immediate practical value.The gig economy also stands to benefit significantly. With freelancers, influencers, and remote workers making up a growing share of the global workforce, access to fast and low-cost international payments is now a necessity.Perhaps most importantly, stablecoins can serve as a gateway to broader financial inclusion. Once users gain access to a stable, digital dollar or euro, they are better positioned to tap into a wider range of financial services — from savings and lending to insurance and investment — laying the foundation for more inclusive, digitally native economies.Challenges Ahead: Regulation and TrustDespite strong momentum, stablecoin adoption is not without its challenges. Regulatory frameworks for digital assets remain uneven across emerging markets. Some governments are leaning into innovation, while others take a more cautious or restrictive approach. Consumer education and trust-building are also critical, particularly in markets with low digital literacy or a history of financial scams.Still, the trajectory is encouraging. Stablecoins like USDC — fully reserved, transparent and issued by a regulated financial entity — offer the level of compliance and accountability that aligns with the expectations of policymakers and financial institutions.Conclusion: Stablecoins as Infrastructure, Not DisruptionStablecoins are no longer a fringe experiment, they’re fast becoming part of the core infrastructure of modern finance, especially in regions where legacy systems fall short.Across Latin America, Asia, and Africa, the convergence of mobile-first technologies, evolving regulatory clarity, and the urgent need for reliable cross-border payments is accelerating demand for flexible, trusted digital currency solutions.The opportunity is clear for banks, fintech, MNOs, and mobile wallets in these markets. Stablecoins provide a path to expand services, reduce transaction costs, and reach new customer segments with faster, more inclusive financial solutions. The shift from stablecoin theory to stablecoin reality is already well underway.

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