Ripple Joins Singapore Sandbox to Test RLUSD in Trade Finance

Ripple has entered Singapore’s BLOOM regulatory sandbox to pilot its RLUSD stablecoin for trade finance settlement, partnering with smart-contract infrastructure provider Unloq to test automated, condition-triggered payments on the XRP Ledger.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) launched the BLOOM initiative, short for Borderless, Liquid, Open, Online, Multi-currency, in October 2025 to extend cross-border settlement capabilities using tokenized bank liabilities and regulated stablecoins. Ripple’s admission to the program follows MAS’s December 2025 approval of expanded payment activities for Ripple Markets APAC, which holds a Major Payment Institution license in the city-state.

40+ Institutions

Financial institutions participating in MAS Project Guardian, the Singapore regulatory sandbox where Ripple is now piloting RLUSD for trade finance settlement.

MAS selection carries weight. The sandbox is not an open-door accelerator; it requires participants to demonstrate regulatory credibility and viable technology. Ripple’s RLUSD, issued under New York Department of Financial Services oversight, met that bar, giving the stablecoin institutional validation beyond U.S. borders.

How RLUSD Automates Trade Finance Settlement

Traditional trade finance relies on correspondent banking networks, manual document verification, and settlement cycles that can stretch days or weeks. Letters of credit, shipment confirmations, and payment releases often move through multiple intermediaries, each adding cost and delay.

$1.7 Trillion

Global trade finance gap (ADB, 2023), the unmet financing demand that digital-asset settlement networks like Ripple’s RLUSD seek to address.

The Ripple-Unloq pilot targets that gap directly. Unloq’s SC+ platform bundles trade obligations, settlement conditions, and financing workflows into a single execution layer. RLUSD on the XRP Ledger acts as the settlement asset, with payments triggered automatically when predefined commercial and shipment conditions are verified.

That programmability is the key differentiator. Instead of manual approvals at each stage, smart-contract logic on the XRP Ledger releases RLUSD payments the moment verified conditions are met. The approach mirrors what regulatory bodies exploring crypto innovation have identified as blockchain’s clearest enterprise use case: reducing counterparty risk through automated, transparent execution.

A joint statement from Ripple and Unloq framed the objective in practical terms: “The model aims to improve visibility into settlement risk and support trade-finance access for smaller businesses.”

For SMEs, the friction is existential. Smaller exporters and importers are disproportionately shut out of traditional trade finance because banks view them as high-risk, low-margin clients. Near-instant stablecoin settlement with programmable conditions could lower the barrier to participation, a thesis the BLOOM sandbox is designed to test under real regulatory constraints.

What a Successful Pilot Unlocks for RLUSD in Asia

Singapore’s MAS is among the most advanced regulators globally on stablecoin and tokenized-asset frameworks. The BLOOM program sits alongside broader initiatives like Project Guardian, which has drawn over 40 financial institutions into tokenized-asset experiments across payments and trade finance.

Competing stablecoin issuers have not secured equivalent sandbox status in Singapore. Neither USDC nor USDT has a comparable smart-contract trade finance partner operating within the BLOOM framework, positioning RLUSD as a first-mover in MAS-regulated programmable trade settlement. That advantage echoes how institutional crypto product issuers are racing to establish regulatory footholds before competitors.

Over 50% of XRP Ledger activity is currently payments-focused, per available network data. The Singapore pilot could accelerate that concentration by proving RLUSD’s viability as a settlement layer for real-world commercial transactions, not just crypto-native transfers.

At the time of the announcement, XRP traded at approximately $1.42 with a market cap near $87.1 billion, ranking it among the top five digital assets globally. Daily trading volume sat around $2.11 billion.

If the pilot succeeds, Ripple’s MPI license and BLOOM track record could serve as a template for RLUSD licensing across broader APAC markets. Singapore has historically functioned as a regulatory proving ground; fintech frameworks tested there tend to influence policy design in Hong Kong, Japan, and across Southeast Asia. That dynamic is similar to how institutional DeFi innovations validated in one jurisdiction often expand rapidly once the regulatory template exists.

The strategic implication is clear. Ripple is not treating Singapore as a one-off experiment. With regulatory approval already secured, a sandbox slot confirmed, and a smart-contract partner in Unloq, the company is positioning RLUSD as foundational infrastructure for regulated stablecoin settlement in Asia’s trade corridors.

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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