Ripple is testing its RLUSD stablecoin within Singapore’s central bank regulatory sandbox to explore stablecoin-powered trade finance, a move that could accelerate cross-border settlement times across key Asian payment corridors.
RLUSD Enters Singapore’s Central Bank Sandbox
Ripple has been accepted into the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s (MAS) regulatory sandbox to pilot RLUSD, its USD-backed stablecoin, for stablecoin-powered trade finance. The pilot targets cross-border settlement in Southeast Asian corridors, where traditional correspondent banking routes can take one to five business days.
RLUSD is Ripple’s regulated USD-pegged stablecoin issued on the XRP Ledger. It received approval from the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) in December 2024, giving it a compliance foundation that institutional partners in Asia’s regulated banking sector typically require before integrating new settlement rails.
The stablecoin has already surpassed $1.4 billion in market capitalization, positioning it as a growing alternative alongside USDC and USDT for institutional cross-border use cases. Ripple began integrating RLUSD into its cross-border payment solution in 2025, laying groundwork for the current Asia-focused expansion.
Why the XRP Ledger Matters for Settlement Speed
The XRP Ledger achieves transaction finality in roughly three to five seconds at fractions of a cent per transaction. For trade finance, where multiple intermediary banks typically sit between sender and receiver, this compression from days to seconds represents a fundamental shift in how settlement liquidity moves through Asian corridors.
RLUSD offers a specific advantage over using raw XRP as a bridge asset: dollar-peg stability. Institutions settling large trade finance transactions need predictable value during the settlement window. RLUSD provides this while still riding the XRP Ledger’s speed, similar to how blockchain foundations are expanding infrastructure support to attract institutional use cases.
Ripple already operates On-Demand Liquidity (ODL) corridors across the Asia-Pacific region. The Singapore sandbox pilot extends that footprint into regulated trade finance, a segment where macro uncertainty has pushed institutions toward faster, more transparent settlement options. Stablecoin integration into evolving blockchain infrastructure continues to accelerate across the industry.
What to Watch: Sandbox Timeline and Competitive Signals
The MAS sandbox pilot does not yet have a publicly confirmed end date or go-live timeline. Traders and institutional watchers should monitor for an official announcement from MAS or Ripple confirming whether the pilot advances to a full production license, which would be the clearest signal that RLUSD settlement rails are moving from testing to live deployment in Singapore’s banking network.
Competing stablecoin settlement plays from Circle (USDC) and Tether (USDT) are also expanding in Asian corridors. The key confirmation signal: whether major Singapore-based banks formally onboard RLUSD as a settlement option following the sandbox results.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.