Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin is central to its strategy of connecting tokenized assets with traditional payment systems.
By Shaurya Malwa|Edited by Omkar Godbole
Updated Oct 9, 2025, 10:54 a.m. Published Oct 9, 2025, 10:47 a.m.

- Ripple is expanding in the Middle East through a partnership with Bahrain Fintech Bay to integrate blockchain and stablecoin infrastructure.
- The collaboration aims to enhance digital asset use in regulated markets, building on Ripple’s existing Dubai license.
- Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin is central to its strategy of connecting tokenized assets with traditional payment systems.
Ripple is expanding its Middle East footprint through a new partnership with Bahrain Fintech Bay, the Kingdom’s main fintech incubator and ecosystem platform, as part of its push to integrate blockchain and stablecoin infrastructure into regulated financial markets.
The move builds on Ripple’s Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA) license obtained earlier this year and underscores growing demand from Gulf institutions to adopt digital asset technologies under clear regulatory frameworks.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW
“The Kingdom of Bahrain has emerged as an early adopter of blockchain technology, and was one of the first jurisdictions globally to regulate cryptoassets,” said Reece Merrick, managing director for the Middle East and Africa at Ripple. “At Ripple we look forward to working with Bahrain Fintech Bay to continue laying the foundations for a thriving local blockchain industry, as well as ultimately offering our digital assets custody solution and stablecoin RLUSD$0.9996 to Bahrain’s financial institutions.”
Under the agreement, Ripple and Bahrain Fintech Bay will collaborate on pilot projects, educational programs, and local accelerator initiatives aimed at expanding digital-asset use cases such as tokenization, cross-border payments, and stablecoin applications.
Ripple is also participating at the Fintech Forward 2025 conference in Sakhir this week, alongside regional banks, regulators, and global fintech firms.
“Bahrain has long been recognised as a financial services hub, and today this legacy is being further enhanced in the digital assets and blockchain space,” said Suzy Al Zeerah, chief operating officer at Bahrain Fintech Bay. “This partnership with Ripple reflects Bahrain FinTech Bay’s commitment to bridging global innovators with the local ecosystem, creating opportunities for pilots, talent development, and cutting-edge solutions that will shape the future of finance.”
Ripple, which operates over 60 regulatory licenses and registrations globally, said the partnership will help position Bahrain as a potential hub for compliant blockchain deployments in the Gulf region.
The company’s RLUSD stablecoin, designed for enterprise use and regulatory clarity, has become central to its strategy of linking tokenized assets with traditional payment infrastructure.
More For You
Sep 9, 2025
Combined spot and derivatives trading on centralized exchanges surged 7.58% to $9.72 trillion in August, marking the highest monthly volume of 2025
What to know:
- Combined spot and derivatives trading on centralized exchanges surged 7.58% to $9.72 trillion in August, marking the highest monthly volume of 2025
- Gate exchange emerged as major player with 98.9% volume surge to $746 billion, overtaking Bitget to become fourth-largest platform
- Open interest across centralized derivatives exchanges rose 4.92% to $187 billion
More For You
By James Van Straten, AI Boost|Edited by Jamie Crawley
22 minutes ago
The lender topped $2.5 billion in total commitments since 2024 as institutional bitcoin adoption has accelerated
What to know:
- Two Prime has issued $827 million in bitcoin-backed loans and credit facilities in Q3 2025, reaching $2.55 billion in total since launch.
- Clients include major firms such as CleanSpark, Hut 8, Kindly MD (Nakamoto), Fold.
- Two Prime attributes its growth to competitive rates and catering to institutions seeking yield and risk management.