Stablecoins combine the characteristics of digital assets and fiat currencies: they allow for efficient transfers and settlements while avoiding the extreme price volatility of traditional cryptocurrencies. For banks, payment institutions, and cross-border settlement companies, stablecoins serve as an ideal bridge connecting traditional finance with the Web3 world.
However, for a long time, Compliance, reserve transparency, and redemption mechanisms have been obstacles. Regulatory agencies often find it difficult to determine whether stablecoins are legitimate currency alternatives.
On November 27, 2025, Ripple officially confirmed that its USD stablecoin RLUSD has been recognized by the Abu Dhabi Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) as an “Accepted Fiat-Referenced Token,” allowing certified institutions to use it for regulated activities within the Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM).
This means that banks, custodians, payment institutions, brokers, and other entities can use RLUSD for settlement, custody, lending, collateral, cross-border payments, and other financial activities, provided they comply with regulatory requirements.
Each RLUSD token is backed by an equivalent reserve of USD, and these reserve assets are high liquidity assets, held separately in custody, distinct from operational assets, regularly audited by third parties, and supported for redemption. These mechanisms enhance transparency and trust with institutions and regulators.
Its circulating market capitalization has exceeded 1.2 billion USD, demonstrating the market’s trust and demand for it. For institutions looking to make large settlements and arrange cross-border liquidity, such stablecoins are more attractive.
The Middle East and North Africa region has complex needs in financial infrastructure and cross-border payments. Traditional banking systems are often costly and slow. The compliance approval of RLUSD provides banks and payment institutions in the region with a fast, compliant, low-cost, and traceable alternative.
In addition, for those institutions looking to incorporate stablecoins into payment, lending, trade settlement, cash management, and other infrastructures, RLUSD has become the preferred tool due to its recognition by the FSRA and support from robust assets.
RLUSD has been approved in the Middle East, demonstrating a possible path for the integration of stablecoins with traditional financial compliance. In today’s increasingly stringent regulatory environment, this “regulated + asset transparency + fiat currency peg” stablecoin model is expected to become a benchmark for more jurisdictions worldwide. If other regions follow the ADGM/FSRA model, stablecoins may truly transition from “speculative assets” to “fundamental financial infrastructure” in the future.
Despite being approved, the use of RLUSD is still limited to licensed institutions and must comply with strict Compliance obligations. Currently, ordinary investors or unauthorized institutions cannot directly enjoy the conveniences brought by this approval.
In addition, while the reserve assets and auditing mechanisms that stablecoins rely on are advantages, attention should still be paid to potential risks such as reserve security, market liquidity, and changes in regulatory policies.
RLUSD has received approval from the Abu Dhabi FSRA, which is an important signal for stablecoins moving towards Compliance and provides a realistic possibility for financial institutions in the Middle East and even globally to adopt stablecoins. With more institutions and regulatory frameworks maturing, stablecoins have the opportunity to become an important infrastructure for future cross-border payments, settlements, and liquidity management. For those interested in the intersection of crypto finance and traditional finance, this is a transformative moment worth close attention.
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