Wednesday, April 30, 2025
UAE stablecoin may change the game for rent, remittances and buy now pay later plans
By Arun Leslie John in 'Century in News'
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Arun Leslie John, The National, April 30, 2025
The anticipation of stablecoins in the UAE continues to increase – along with the number of transactions they are expected to transform.
On Monday, Abu Dhabi entities IHC, ADQ and First Abu Dhabi Bank announced plans to launch a dirham-backed stablecoin, which will be fully regulated by the UAE Central Bank, aimed at easing payment solutions and further doubling down on the use of the digital asset.
We have already established what we can expect with the arrival of stablecoins in the UAE. On the other hand, the underlying programming – from all aspects, technicalities to oversight – to make it work is interesting on its own.
Game-changing 'smart' programming
Stablecoins would be able to make smart contracts – also known as programmable money – even smarter as they can execute payments in stages when certain conditions are met.
FAB last September announced it was the first financial institution to complete a programmable payment pilot with JPM Coin, developed by a unit of US bank JP Morgan.
In supply chains, for example, smart contracts make sure that money is only paid when every part of the deal is completed, so there is less risk of fraud or arguments. In corporate finance, it helps keep track of money in real time, making it easier to avoid errors and stay transparent about where the money is going.
“We view this as a foundational milestone – one that strengthens liquidity, enhances transparency and advances cross-border interoperability across the Web3 ecosystem,” Shunyet Jan, head of institutional and derivatives at Dubai-based crypto exchange Bybit, told The National.
Regulation and accountability
Being a piece of code, regulating smart contracts is not straightforward. Typically, regulators tend to adopt a functional approach, regulating instead the outcomes or the activities enabled by such smart contracts.
That said, accountability is not entirely out of reach, especially as the space gradually matures and rules are drawn up
While indeed money will continue to be regulated by national financial and fiduciary authorities, including central banks, issuers of stablecoins should and must be subject to global and local laws and guidance.
These include those around know your customer, consumer protection, safety and soundness, and, perhaps arguably the most important, anti-money laundering.
What about rents, BNPL and business contracts?
Although stablecoins are pegged to a traditional fiat currency or commodity, they do not require extensive paperwork, approvals and physical branches.
On the other hand, stablecoins would only require an internet connection, a digital wallet and proof of identity.
This system disruption could entirely change how we transact, ranging from remittances, rent cheques, buy-now-pay-later schemes, ethical retail investments and even business contracts.
Rent cheques and other day-to-day expenses are also expected to be vastly affected as blockchain-powered stablecoins will eliminate days-long processing and reduce fees significantly.
For investments and business contracts, stablecoins would offer a less volatile exposure to cryptocurrencies while enabling transactions. According to New York-based Chainalysis, 93 per cent of stablecoin transfers in the UAE are retail-sized, portraying the heightened adoption among retail participants.
Source
The national