Can the Ripple RLUSD Stablecoin move beyond crypto trading and into real business payments? Ripple is now testing that idea in Singapore after joining BLOOM, an initiative run by the Monetary Authority of Singapore to expand settlement capabilities for tokenized bank liabilities and regulated stablecoins.
The pilot links RLUSD with trade finance, where payments often still move through slow manual checks and legacy banking layers.
The organisation said on March 25 that it is working with supply chain finance firm Unloq inside MAS’s BLOOM framework.
The pilot uses Unloq’s SC+ platform to combine trade obligations, settlement rules, and financing workflows in one execution layer, while RLUSD on the XRP Ledger handles the payment leg.

Source: X (formerly Twitter)
Funds are set to move automatically once pre-set conditions are verified, including shipment confirmation.
That matters because trade finance still depends heavily on paperwork, manual review, and correspondent banking links that can delay settlement for days or longer.
The organisation said the setup is designed to improve transparency, cut costs, and support faster cross-border trade settlement.
It also said the model could improve financing access for small and medium-sized businesses by making payment conditions clearer and easier to track.
The Singapore angle is important. MAS created BLOOM to strengthen settlement capabilities around tokenized forms of money, giving firms a controlled setting to test regulated use cases.
Ripple’s entry adds another institution-focused project to a market already known for its clear digital asset rules.
RLUSD also fits that regulated theme. it says the stablecoin is designed to hold a constant value of one U.S. dollar, is redeemable 1:1, and is backed by a segregated reserve of cash, cash equivalents, and short-dated U.S. government instruments.
It is issued on the XRP Ledger and Ethereum, giving Ripple a payment asset that is built for payment and treasury use rather than price volatility.
Because RLUSD is a stablecoin, the market read-through is less about token price and more about adoption. The stronger signal here is that they tying the stablecoin to a real trade-finance workflow in a regulated environment, not just promoting another exchange venue or payments corridor.
That fits Ripple’s broader push this month after expanding Ripple Payments into a fuller stablecoin platform and announcing plans to secure an Australian financial services license.
In that sense, the update is really about enterprise credibility. If the pilot works, it could strengthen it’s case that stablecoins can handle programmable settlement in real commercial activity, especially where speed, compliance, and visibility matter most.
This update stands out because it gives the stable-coin a narrow but practical use case. Instead of broad promises, they are testing whether regulated stablecoin settlement can work inside an actual trade workflow.
YMYL Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not financial, investment, or legal advice. Readers should verify official statements before making any business or investment decision.
Muskan Sharma is a crypto journalist with 2 years of experience in industry research, finance analysis, and content creation. Skilled in crafting insightful blogs, news articles, and SEO-optimized content. Passionate about delivering accurate, engaging, and timely insights into the evolving crypto landscape. As a crypto journalist at Coin Gabbar, I research and analyze market trends, write news articles, create SEO-optimized content, and deliver accurate, engaging insights on cryptocurrency developments, regulations, and emerging technologies.