Ripple has begun testing its RLUSD stablecoin in a regulatory sandbox run by Singapore’s central bank, aiming to modernize trade finance payments. The pilot, conducted under the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s BLOOM initiative, involves Ripple and supply chain firm Unloq. The test focuses on automating cross-border payments by triggering transactions once shipment conditions are verified.
Ripple confirmed its participation in BLOOM, a program led by the Monetary Authority of Singapore. The initiative focuses on tokenized bank liabilities and regulated stablecoins. According to the company, the pilot integrates RLUSD into a controlled environment for institutional testing.
Notably, Ripple partnered with Unloq to execute the trial. The system connects Unloq’s SC+ platform with the XRP Ledger. It combines trade obligations, settlement conditions, and financing workflows into a single execution layer. As a result, the setup allows payments to move once predefined conditions are satisfied.
The pilot targets long-standing inefficiencies in trade finance systems. Traditionally, transactions depend on manual verification and multiple banking intermediaries. These steps often delay settlements for days or weeks.
However, the RLUSD-based system automates this process. Once shipment verification occurs, the platform releases payments instantly. Unloq’s infrastructure manages trade documents and contract terms within one system. Meanwhile, RLUSD handles the actual transfer of funds on-chain.
This development follows two recent Ripple announcements. The company expanded Ripple Payments into a broader stablecoin infrastructure platform. It also secured an Australian financial services license through an acquisition.
Together, these moves align with Ripple’s institutional focus. The Singapore sandbox entry adds a central bank-backed testing layer. According to the company, this step supports regulated experimentation for enterprise use cases.