Ripple Launches RLUSD Stablecoin in Japan Through SBI VC Trade

Ripple Launches RLUSD Stablecoin in Japan Through SBI VC Trade Thumbnail

Ripple and SBI Group have officially launched the RLUSD stablecoin in Japan, making it available to both institutional and retail users through SBI VC Trade’s VCTRADE platform. The rollout, announced on June 24, 2026, marks Ripple’s first regulated stablecoin entry into one of Asia’s largest financial markets.

JFSA approval clears RLUSD for Japan’s regulated market

The launch followed approval from the Japan Financial Services Agency, which cleared RLUSD for use under the Payment Services Act framework for foreign-issued stablecoins. SBI VC Trade classifies RLUSD as a Type 4 electronic payment instrument on its licensed platform. For related coverage, see Bybit Launches Dedicated AI Subaccounts in MENA.

SBI VC Trade began handling RLUSD after a maintenance window on June 24. The exchange is offering deposits and withdrawals free of charge, though launch support is limited to Ethereum only. Withdrawals are capped at the equivalent of approximately 10 million yen per transaction. For related coverage, see Squid Raises $6 Million in Round Backed by Ripple and North Island Ventures.

RLUSD carried a $1,594,292,853 market cap around the time of the Japan launch, positioning it well below stablecoin leaders USDT and USDC but within reach of meaningful institutional adoption in a single market.

RLUSD market cap
$1,594,292,853
Public CoinGecko data shows RLUSD had already reached a roughly $1.59 billion market cap around the time of the Japan rollout.

The stablecoin was trading at $0.9995, with $127,511,455.63 in 24-hour volume, indicating active liquidity ahead of the Japanese market opening.

RLUSD 24h volume
$127,511,455.63
The 24-hour trading volume provides a simple liquidity benchmark that complements the launch announcement.

Why SBI VC Trade matters for Ripple’s Japan rollout

SBI VC Trade operates under the SBI Group umbrella, one of Japan’s largest financial conglomerates. By distributing RLUSD through an already-licensed and regulated exchange, Ripple bypasses the lengthy process of establishing its own local infrastructure.

The partnership gives RLUSD immediate access to SBI VC Trade’s existing user base across both retail and institutional segments. Zero-fee deposits and withdrawals lower the friction for early adopters, though the Ethereum-only support at launch limits on-chain flexibility compared to multi-chain stablecoin competitors.

The withdrawal cap of roughly 10 million yen per transaction suggests a cautious rollout, likely reflecting both regulatory requirements and risk management during the initial phase. This approach mirrors how stablecoin payment infrastructure is being built incrementally across Asia.

What the Japan launch signals for Ripple’s stablecoin strategy

Japan’s regulated approval gives RLUSD a compliance credential that most competing stablecoins lack in the market. The Payment Services Act framework specifically accommodates foreign-issued stablecoins, creating a legal pathway that Ripple is now the first major U.S.-based issuer to use.

The move extends a pattern of geographic expansion for RLUSD. Ripple has also been pushing RLUSD into African markets, while simultaneously working to integrate crypto capabilities into treasury management systems globally.

Despite the regulatory milestone, RLUSD remains far smaller than market leaders. Its roughly $1.59 billion market cap is a fraction of USDT’s and USDC’s combined dominance, and the Japan launch alone is unlikely to close that gap quickly.

The broader crypto market context adds uncertainty. The Fear & Greed Index sat at 12 at the time of the announcement, reflecting extreme fear across digital asset markets. Whether that dampens early RLUSD adoption in Japan or whether the regulated stablecoin benefits from a flight-to-safety dynamic remains an open question.

For SBI Group, the partnership deepens its long-standing relationship with Ripple and positions VCTRADE as a differentiated exchange in Japan’s competitive crypto landscape. If RLUSD gains traction, the zero-fee structure and regulatory clarity could attract institutional capital looking for a compliant USD-denominated stablecoin in the Japanese 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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Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
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