While Tether remains on the sidelines, AED Stablecoin LLD is positioning itself as a leading contender to issue the first regulated stablecoin pegged to the dirham in the United Arab Emirates.
According to a recent announcement, the Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) has granted the issuer preliminary approval under its framework for the regulation of payment coin services.
This development helps ease concerns about potential restrictions on crypto payments following the CBUAE’s introduction of its licensing framework, which prohibits crypto payments unless they involve licensed tokens linked to the dirham.
If fully approved, “AE Coin” will serve as a local trading pair for cryptocurrencies across exchanges and decentralized platforms, while allowing merchants to accept it for goods and services.
The central bank’s framework also excludes algorithmic stablecoins and privacy tokens, prioritizing fully-backed stablecoins. Issuers are required to fully back their tokens with cash in dirham-denominated escrow accounts at a UAE bank.
Alternatively, issuers of stablecoins may hold at least 50% of the reserve assets as cash, with the remainder invested in UAE government bonds or CBUAE bonds maturing within six months.
After closing 2024 on a high note, the crypto market faced a sharp correction in early 2025. Enthusiasm that had been fueled by a favorable macro backdrop—including Donald Trump’s presidential win and dovish signals from the U.S. Federal Reserve—quickly gave way to uncertainty…
Several cryptocurrencies among the top 100 by market cap have faced heavy losses over the past seven days, with a few tokens seeing sharp double-digit declines.
Donald Trump has reignited his attacks on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, criticizing him for holding off on interest rate cuts despite slowing inflation.
Once seen as a sluggish performer compared to major altcoins, XRP is now drawing attention for its impressive comeback.