Ripple joined Singapore’s MAS-led BLOOM initiative to test RLUSD in a trade finance pilot with Unloq.
• The pilot links payment release to shipment verification and other predefined commercial conditions.
• The project gives RLUSD a regulated enterprise use case in cross-border settlement infrastructure.
Ripple is testing its RLUSD stablecoin in Singapore through a trade finance pilot under the Monetary Authority of Singapore.
The blockchain giant is partnering with supply chain finance firm Unloq on a system that releases cross-border payments once shipment conditions are verified.
The project gives Ripple a regulated setting to test RLUSD in a commercial settlement workflow rather than a purely market-facing one.
BLOOM, launched by MAS in October 2025, is designed to extend settlement capabilities using tokenized forms of commercial bank money and stablecoins that meet regulatory expectations.
Ripple said the pilot combines Unloq’s SC+ trade finance platform with the XRP Ledger and RLUSD.
Under that setup, trade obligations, settlement conditions and financing workflows are brought into a single execution layer, with payments moving once predefined triggers, including shipment verification, are met.
That targets a familiar trade finance bottleneck. Cross-border payments often wait on document review, manual checks and coordination between multiple parties.
A programmable settlement structure tied to verified commercial events could shorten that gap and improve visibility for importers, exporters and financing partners.
Singapore gives the pilot more weight than a generic product test.
MAS has positioned BLOOM as a framework for industry collaboration around digital settlement assets.
It emphasizes standardized approaches and risk management for tokenized bank liabilities and regulated stablecoins.
RLUSD enters the pilot as part of a central bank-backed initiative focused on settlement infrastructure.
The company is effectively placing its stablecoin inside a policy environment built around compliance, interoperability and institutional payments.
For Ripple, the pilot gives RLUSD a clearer enterprise use case.
The stablecoin is being tested as a settlement asset in a workflow where funds move only after commercial conditions are satisfied.
The move also fits a broader push across the stablecoin sector toward payments, treasury and market infrastructure.
Ripple’s announcement frames RLUSD as part of programmable settlement infrastructure for trade finance, an area where automation and conditional payments can map directly onto real business processes.