- Banks in the UAE have moved into the proper implementation of blockchain products.
- The UAE’s clear regulatory approach is behind the region’s leadership in the industry.
- VARA provided the required structure for crypto development in the UAE.
Banks and financial institutions in the UAE are rapidly shifting from blockchain experimentation to real-world deployment, buoyed by the region’s early regulatory clarity, which experts believe has propelled the country into a leading hub for regulated digital finance
The Result of a Clear Regulatory Approach
According to Stephen Richardson, chief strategy officer and head of banking at Fireblocks, the UAE has a decisive regulatory approach that is lacking in many jurisdictions, which underpins its impressive advancement in digital asset and technological implementation. Richardson noted that establishing VARA provided the region with the required structure for supervised issuance, custody, and settlement of digital assets.
Richardson added that regulators in the UAE provided the level of clarity that enabled boards and the leadership at major institutions to commit capital and integrate blockchain into their core operations. Meanwhile, stakeholders consider the approval of the AED-backed DDSC stablecoin in mid-February as one of the strongest signals for the accelerated adoption of digital technology in the UAE.
What Financial Institutions are Doing in the UAE
The stablecoin initiative, launched by IHC in collaboration with Sirius International Holding and First Abu Dhabi Bank, represents a significant milestone in the UAE’s digital asset strategy. Richardson describes the stablecoin launch as a regulation that provided enough clarity for banks to move beyond pilots and into commercialization.
In the meantime, tier-one institutions in the UAE are deploying stablecoins, tokenized deposits, and brokerage services. Meanwhile, smaller and mid-tier firms are weighing whether to acquire technology or capability, according to Richardson, since platform flexibility has become more important than ownership.
Richardson explained that banks in the UAE have moved beyond debating whether blockchain matters. According to him, their current focus is on how quickly they can deploy safely before digital native platforms capture customer relationships. However, Richardson highlighted the need for resilient orchestration, liquidity coordination, and risk controls to support large-scale adoption, considering that stablecoin payments and on-chain settlements are becoming central to the UAE’s digital asset strategies.
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