The post The UAE Bet Big on Blockchain – Now It’s Paying Off appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Blockchain is so broad these days that it’s hard to keep pace with what’s happening within a single sector, never mind in every regional hotspot. If you’re not up to speed on the latest developments within the United Arab Emirates (UAE) then, you can be forgiven. But we really should set that to rights, because the Arabian nation, composed of no less than seven emirates, has gone all in on blockchain.
Understanding why the UAE is now synonymous with blockchain is the key to understanding where key industry verticals, from stablecoins to institutional yield products, are headed next. Because many of the most innovative products being shipped right now within these sectors, as well as payments and B2B settlement, originate in the UAE. This is why.
Programming a Post-Oil Renaissance
To the uninitiated, the first resource that springs to mind when the UAE is mentioned is oil. Its oil-rich sheiks, with their untold wealth, are the stuff of legend. But while that legend – in the case of select privileged, high-powered individuals is true, there’s a whole lot more to the UAE. Especially now, it’s moving to a post-oil society.
Not because the oil – or our dependence upon it – is drying up. There should be plenty of both for decades to come. But because astute countries know to plan ahead, and identify emerging industries where they can dominate once established ones begin to decline. For the UAE, one of those industries has been blockchain.
Slowly at first and then, as the maxim goes, all at once, the UAE’s blockchain pivot is starting to pay dividends. It’s made particular headway in crafting institutional-grade products, delivering regulated access to money markets for corporate clients who already have a presence – and capital – in the United Arab Emirates. All that was missing, until recently, was a means of moving this money onchain and start putting it to work.
Evolving Yield in the Emirates
One of the primary focuses of blockchain businesses within the UAE has been productive capital. In other words, providing ways for those with money to make more money – without materially adding risk. Local stablecoin project Tharwa, for example, led by Founder Saeed Al Fahim, has been engineering a solution to the idle capital problem whereby wealthy investors have cash on hand but few attractive options for growing it through yield products.
The result is thUSD, an AI-managed, yield-bearing instrument backed by a diversified basket of real-world assets. This might sound like a general-purpose institutional yield product until you zoom in, whereupon a few novel features emerge. For one thing, thUSD is backed by Sukuk (Islamic bonds) as well as UAE real estate and gold. This yield-bearing stable is complemented by wthUSD, which is targeted at DeFi users, be they individuals or DAOs.
Other stablecoin projects operating in the region are also catering to domestic interests including developing tokens pegged not against USD, but the dirham. DDSC is a dirham-pegged stable approved by the Central Bank of the UAE and approved for institutional and government usage. Even the blockchain that hosts it is localized.
Not all of the innovation occurring in the country is inward-looking, however. Its domestic blockchain businesses have been joined by a string of major players from overseas, all looking to set up shop in crypto’s new frontier. Ripple, for example, recently announced a partnership with UAE digital bank Zand to pair the former’s RLUSD with the latter’s AEDZ stablecoin, while Circle has obtained operating permission in the Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM), bringing USDC to the West Asian market.
A Top Down Takeover
Blockchain development in global hotspots, be it the U.S. or Japan, has traditionally taken a bottom up approach, whereby startups shape the industry before the government belatedly takes an interest, be it to regulate or participate. The UAE’s blockchain rollout has taken a reverse approach, with development being sanctioned at the highest level.
The country’s central bank has moved into the operational phase of its Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC), and looks odds-on to go live with its implementation while most nations are still playing with pilots. It’s not the only blockchain area where the UAE government has taken a keen interest; the dirham-backed DDSC stablecoin was approved as part of a joint initiative IHC, Sirius International, and First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB) and has been engineered for government and enterprise adoption.
Billions for Binance
It can be hard for crypto users with no connection to the United Arab Emirates to fully grasp the wealth available within this oil-rich country seeking new markets to allocate to. The sort of capital on standby within the region is embodied by MGX, which revealed in March 2025 it was putting $2B into Binance. Although initially founded as an AI-focused fund, launched in partnership with BlackRock and Microsoft, MGX has since widened its remit, stating that it “aims to enable innovation at the intersection of AI, blockchain technology and finance.”
This multi-billion dollar deal was one of several landmark funding announcements highlighted by The Blockchain Center Abu Dhabi in a recent report, which also emphasized the areas where the UAE’s blockchain embrace is paying dividends. The report gives credit to the country’s clear regulatory framework, which has allowed local businesses to adopt digital assets with certainty.
According to CEO of The Blockchain Center Abu Dhabi, Abdulla Al Dhaheri: “The UAE has created an environment where regulators, financial institutions, and technology providers can work together to deploy blockchain in a controlled and meaningful way. The result is an ecosystem focused on real use cases, regulatory clarity, and long-term financial infrastructure.”
From Physical to Digital Commodities
One of the blockchain industry’s defining trends over the last two years has been the tokenization of real-world assets including commodities such as gold and oil. It seems fitting that some of the UAE profits made from this liquid gold are now being reinvested in digital gold, be it Bitcoin through Digital Asset Treasuries (DATs) or stablecoins that provide access to structured yield.
It’s been a quiet revolution, but the UAE has transitioned into a major player in crypto and digital finance. The odd headline-grabbing investment aside, such as the $2B MGX-Binance deal, most of this progress has occurred without fanfare. Instead, it’s been boring, practical, and ultimately sensible decisions that have made the United Arab Emirates a leading hub for blockchain innovation.
Its central bank’s active licensing has certainly helped, as has the operational deployment of national stablecoins. Meanwhile, the strategic engagement of global issuers and local startups have provided an array of onramps for institutions looking to deploy onchain capital. Put it all together – the compliance, the cross-border functionality, and the real-world asset integration – and you’ve got a region whose blockchain bet is now paying off.