Ripple Tests RLUSD in Singapore MAS Sandbox as Stablecoin Market Cap Hits $1.5B

ripple rlusd singapore mas sandbox market cap 1 5 billion thumbnail

Ripple has entered Singapore’s Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) regulatory sandbox to pilot its RLUSD stablecoin for trade finance payments, as the token’s market capitalization crosses the $1.5 billion mark less than 15 months after launch.

The move positions RLUSD as one of the first institutional-grade stablecoins to be tested within a central bank sandbox specifically for cross-border trade settlement, a use case that has long been central to Ripple’s enterprise payments strategy.

RLUSD Market Cap Crosses $1.5 Billion

RLUSD, Ripple’s USD-backed stablecoin that launched in December 2024, has now surpassed $1.5 billion in total market capitalization. The milestone reflects rapid institutional uptake for a stablecoin designed to operate on both the XRP Ledger and Ethereum.

$1.5B

RLUSD Stablecoin Market Cap — Ripple, March 2026

That growth rate is notable in a stablecoin market dominated by Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USDC, both of which took significantly longer to reach comparable levels. RLUSD’s trajectory suggests that Ripple’s existing enterprise relationships and On-Demand Liquidity (ODL) infrastructure have provided a built-in distribution channel.

Unlike stablecoins that gained traction primarily through DeFi yield farming, RLUSD has been positioned from the start as a settlement asset for regulated financial institutions. The $1.5 billion figure signals that institutional treasuries, not just retail traders, are allocating to the token.

Ripple Joins Singapore’s Bloom Project to Test Trade Finance Payments

The more consequential development is Ripple’s entry into Singapore’s MAS Bloom Project, a regulatory sandbox operated by Singapore’s central bank to test fintech innovations under supervised conditions.

MAS Regulatory Sandbox

Ripple’s RLUSD approved for testing under Singapore’s Monetary Authority of Singapore fintech sandbox program — March 2026

The Bloom Project pilot focuses on stablecoin-powered trade finance, specifically using RLUSD to facilitate real-world cross-border trade settlement. Trade finance, which covers invoice financing, letters of credit, and supply chain payments, is a $10+ trillion global market that still relies heavily on correspondent banking networks and multi-day settlement cycles.

The MAS sandbox is not a rubber stamp. Companies accepted into the program must meet strict compliance requirements and operate under direct regulatory oversight. For Ripple, sandbox entry represents a formal regulatory green light to test RLUSD in live trade corridors under MAS supervision, a stronger credibility signal than simply listing on exchanges. The broader crypto industry continues to seek similar regulatory clarity, as seen in initiatives like TRON DAO’s expanded fund targeting on-chain payments.

The Bloom Project pilot will test whether RLUSD can reduce settlement times and costs for trade finance transactions routed through Singapore, one of Asia’s largest trade hubs.

What Singapore’s Pilot Means for Ripple’s Institutional Stablecoin Strategy

Singapore is a strategic choice. The city-state processes a significant share of Asia-Pacific trade finance volume and serves as a regional headquarters for major global banks. MAS has been among the more proactive regulators in establishing frameworks for digital assets, making it an ideal testing ground for institutional stablecoin use cases.

Ripple’s existing ODL infrastructure already operates in the Asia-Pacific region, providing liquidity corridors that could integrate RLUSD as a settlement layer. The sandbox pilot effectively tests whether RLUSD can slot into real trade finance workflows, not just crypto-native payment rails. This kind of institutional expansion echoes the broader trend of crypto firms partnering with established industries to build mainstream credibility.

The distinction between this sandbox test and typical stablecoin adoption matters. DeFi stablecoin usage is driven by yield and liquidity incentives. The MAS pilot, by contrast, tests RLUSD in a regulated, institutional context where compliance, settlement finality, and counterparty trust are the primary concerns.

For Ripple’s competitive positioning against USDC and USDT in institutional corridors, the Singapore pilot is a proof point. Circle has pursued its own regulatory approvals across jurisdictions, but Ripple’s approach of embedding RLUSD directly into a central bank sandbox for trade finance targets a specific, high-value use case rather than broad retail adoption. While enforcement actions against bad actors in crypto continue, as highlighted by recent laundering investigations, Ripple’s regulatory-first approach with RLUSD aims to position the token on the compliant side of the ledger.

Concrete next steps from the pilot have not yet been disclosed. If the sandbox test succeeds, Ripple could seek a full MAS license for RLUSD-based trade finance services in Singapore, potentially opening the door to similar pilots across Southeast Asia’s rapidly growing digital payments market.

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.

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