The tall skyscrapers of Abu Dhabi are now home to something new and important in the world of money. The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has officially approved its very first US dollar stablecoin—a digital version of the US dollar.
This stablecoin is called USDU. A company named Universal Digital (based in Abu Dhabi) launched it on Thursday.
What makes this special?
- It’s the first one fully registered and approved by the UAE’s Central Bank under their new rules for digital payments.
- That official “stamp” means it’s regulated and trusted for use in crypto trading, settlements, and other digital finance stuff—something many other countries (like the US or Europe) have not done yet for a dollar-based stablecoin.
Breaking New Ground in Digital Settlement
This development means that financial institutions finally have a compliant route for settling digital-asset and derivative transactions, which UAE rules say must happen either in fiat currency or through registered payment tokens.
The stablecoin keeps full backing through US dollar reserves parked at major UAE banks, including Emirates NBD, Mashreq, and Mbank. An independent accounting firm checks these reserves monthly, offering transparency that reflects regulatory frameworks emerging across the EU, Japan, and parts of the United States.
Strategic Partnerships Drive Adoption
Universal has teamed up with Aquanow, a firm regulated by Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority, to weave USDU across the broader digital-asset ecosystem. The company also eyes collaboration with AECoin, the UAE’s licensed dirham stablecoin, allowing future currency conversions for domestic settlements.
“Being the first foreign payment token registered by the UAE Central Bank gives institutions the clarity and confidence they have been waiting for,” said Juha Viitala, Universal’s Senior Executive Officer. The launch puts the UAE among the world’s first jurisdictions running operational frameworks for compliant USD-backed digital settlement instruments.