Ripple has secured a major regulatory win in the Middle East. Its USD-backed stablecoin, RLUSD, has been officially greenlisted by Abu Dhabi’s Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA). This approval allows RLUSD to be used inside Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM). It is one of the region’s most important international financial centers.
With this move, RLUSD is now cleared for use as collateral, for lending and across prime brokerage platforms operating under FSRA oversight. This shifts RLUSD from a simple transaction asset into a full institutional settlement tool. Ripple says this step strengthens its position as a trusted provider of compliant digital finance infrastructure across the Middle East.
What FSRA Approval Actually Unlocks for Institutions
The FSRA’s recognition means licensed firms inside ADGM can now legally deploy RLUSD for regulated financial services. These include margin trading, borrowing, secured lending and settlement between institutional counterparties. This matters because regulatory clearance is often the final barrier for large banks, funds and brokerage firms. Without it, stablecoins remain stuck in limited use cases. With it, they become embedded in real financial plumbing.
Compliance and trust are non-negotiables for institutional finance.
— Ripple (@Ripple) November 27, 2025
That's why $RLUSD has been greenlisted by Abu Dhabi’s FSRA, enabling its use as collateral on exchanges, for lending, and on prime brokerage platforms within @ADGlobalMarket—the international financial centre of…
Ripple confirmed that RLUSD already holds a market capitalization above $1.2 billion. The stablecoin operates under a New York Department of Financial Services trust charter. It also follows strict safeguards, including full 1:1 USD backing. With independent attestations, asset segregation and guaranteed redemption rights. As a result, RLUSD now meets both U.S. and Middle East compliance standards. That dual approval adds serious credibility.
Ripple Expands Its Regional Footprint Across the Middle East
The Abu Dhabi approval builds on Ripple’s growing presence across the region. Earlier this year, Ripple entered Bahrain through a new strategic partnership. It also secured its first African custody client in Absa Bank. In the UAE, Ripple already works with Zand Bank and Mamo, two of the earliest adopters of its blockchain-based payment services in the country. These partnerships show that regional demand for compliant crypto infrastructure is rising fast.
Ripple also plans to integrate RLUSD deeper into its enterprise services. These include cross-border payments, capital market settlement, institutional custody and its Ripple Prime brokerage platform. The company says regulatory clarity now allows institutions to move faster.
What This Means for XRP and the Broader Ripple Ecosystem
While RLUSD remains a USD-backed stablecoin. Its approval carries indirect benefits for the wider Ripple ecosystem. RLUSD now acts as a regulated settlement layer. At the same time, XRP continues to serve as a liquidity bridge across different currencies and markets. Together, they form a two-layer structure. One handles stable settlement. The other manages cross-border liquidity. This setup appeals directly to banks and payment firms that require speed and regulatory certainty.
Market participants also see this as another step toward deeper institutional adoption of Ripple’s technology. Abu Dhabi’s approval sends a clear signal. Specifically, the Middle East is open to regulated crypto finance, and Ripple is positioning itself at the center of that shift. Indeed, RLUSD’s greenlisting marks one of the most significant stablecoin regulatory approvals in the region this year.
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