Singapore Strives to be Home for Stablecoins, but Challenges Lie Ahead

Legacy policy might get in the way of a progressive, sound crypto framework, leaving the market to seek stablecoins that approximate a dollar-proxy.

article-image

Singapore; Source: Shutterstock

share

key takeaways

  • Singapore is capitalizing on an uncertain regulatory environment in the US when it comes to stablecoins
  • Blocking the city-state’s growth are legacy monetary policies and demand for USD-pegged stablecoins just like how the USD dominates in global trade

While the vast American bureaucratic and legislative leviathan goes through the machinations of determining how to regulate stablecoins, the governor of Singapore’s Central Bank, the Monetary Authority of Singapore, has said that crypto has a place in the future of finance. But even if Singapore embraces digital assets and stablecoins, will the market really jump away from a world of USD-denominated stablecoins?

The market is clamoring for certainty, as Jerald David, President, of Arca Capital Management put it in an interview with Blockworks. All eyes are on DC as the wait for concrete policy — which can come in different flavors — is expected to be over soon, he explained. Clarity in the US could come from either a federal mandate from the SEC which would “trigger drastic action on the part of incumbents” in the stablecoin space, or a mandate to continue the current “patchwork of regulations” led by FinCen.”  

“Just like how we spent many months waiting for a bitcoin ETF, next we are going to be waiting for the SEC to issue guidance on stablecoins,” he told Blockworks. 

By contrast, in Singapore, this waiting and uncertainty doesn’t exist. Instead, this has all been replaced with codified rules for what authorities there call e-money. Representing the Singapore dollar, XSGD is the first project to take advantage of this, and its co-creator Aymeric Salley told Blockworks in a recent interview that he sees a future where the “USD will eventually only represent 50% or less of the total stablecoin value in circulation.”

But can such a future be wished into existence? It might not be that easy. Despite the regulatory uncertainty in DC, there really isn’t anything else out there like the US dollar.

Singapore has an active policy to discourage the internationalization of the SGD. In a paper written by One Chong Tee, the deputy managing director of MAS’ Financial Supervision Department, he explained that exchange rate is the principal tool of monetary policy in the country. Given the island nation’s reliance on imports, exchange rates, not money supply, is the key financial tool in their arsenal — which also provides resistance against short telling currency attacks. 

“Smaller economies are concerned that their currencies will no longer be relevant to their economy,” said National University of Singapore finance processor David Lee in an interview with Blockworks.

Is the SGD the only option for a non-USD stablecoin?

Vince Yang, founder of the DEX zkLink, pointed to Dubai as a potential solution. Yang, who is actively analyzing international crypto regulation as a necessary part of running a DEX, said that the country is building a solid compliance framework and a monetary policy that also integrates crypto. 

And this crypto-friendly monetary policy is based around the currency of the nation, the Dirham, being pegged to the US dollar. Since November 1997, the fiscal policy of the UAE has been to peg its currency to the USD at a rate of 3.6725 Dirham to the dollar.

“The market hates uncertainty, which is why it’s exploring regulatory hedges like the XSGD and fueling its growth,” Arca’s David said. “But the market also likes the USD. So with Dubai’s currency, you have the friendly regulatory support and the backing of the USD — just divide it by 3.6725, and you get a dollar.”

Most stablecoins are a proxy for the US-dollar. Could the future of stablecoins include proxies of a proxy of the greenback?

Tags

Upcoming Events

Javits Center North | 445 11th Ave

Tues - Thurs, March 18 - 20, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

Brooklyn, NY

TUES - THURS, JUNE 24 - 26, 2025

Permissionless IV serves as the definitive gathering for crypto’s technical founders, developers, and builders to come together and create the future.If you’re ready to shape the future of crypto, Permissionless IV is where it happens.

Old Billingsgate

Mon - Wed, October 13 - 15, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

recent research

Research Report Templates (15).png

Research

A spot listing on Binance can support highly favorable short term returns. Tokens that TGE on Binance exhibit lower short term returns when compared to tokens that receive the listing after TGE. Both spot and futures listings support higher returns, while a spot listing is historically more favorable. Tokens that have yet to receive a Binance spot listing may be trading at a 30-50% discount to their market value upon receiving a Binance spot listing.

article-image

Maple’s Sid Powell said that TradFi firms have been in contact with the firm about lending and borrowing in crypto

article-image

Building onchain public goods is noble but they don’t always make the number go up

article-image

Vector is a mobile social trading app with a built-in crypto wallet that lets users broadcast their trades to other users

article-image

Kraken Pay is only the latest product in the growing crypto payments landscape

article-image

One ex-SEC senior counsel doesn’t “expect an overnight response to this, [but] rather a slow rollout of approvals”

article-image

The unemployment rate has “stabilized” and the labor market is “solid,” officials said