USDC stablecoin issuer Circle has received in-principle approval (IPA) from the Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) of the Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM), the company announced on April 29.
The approval moves Circle closer to obtaining a full Financial Services Permission (FSP) license, allowing it to operate as a regulated money services provider in the United Arab Emirates, the firmsaidin an official press release.
Jeremy Allaire, Circle’s Co-Founder and CEO, said the approval “advances our strategy to establish deep roots in markets embracing the onchain economy.” He added:
“It also underscores Circle’s enduring commitment to global stablecoin oversight—strengthening trust, compliance, and adoption worldwide, while laying a resilient foundation for the internet financial system.”
Related:Circle files for Initial Public Offering planned for April
Circle partners with Hub71
In addition to regulatory progress, Circle announced a partnership with Hub71, Abu Dhabi’s tech ecosystem. As part of the collaboration, the two firms plan to work together on projects within ADGM’s digital regulatory sandbox.
Circle will also join Hub71’s digital assets group, sharing its experience with a community of more than 500 tech startups and investors.
Circle’s flagship USDC token is the second-largest stablecoin in terms of market capitalization. As of now, there are $62.03 billion USDCUSDC$0.9998USDCChange (24h)0.02%Market Cap$52.17BVolume (24h)$107.72MView Moretokens in circulation, according to data from CoinMarketCap.
Meanwhile, Circle has been pushing into new global markets amid rising interest in stablecoins.
In July 2024, Circlebecame the first global stablecoin issuerto comply with the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation.
In Japan, Circle expanded its presence through a partnership with SBI Holdings. On March 26, 2025, SBI VC Trade, a subsidiary of SBI Holdings,launched USDC trading, making it the first stablecoin approved under Japan’s regulatory framework.
Related:Circle executive denies claims of seeking US banking license
UAE aims to position itself a major Web3 hub
The United Arab Emirates has been actively working to establish itself as a global Web3 hub, leveraging progressive regulation and strategic partnerships to attract leading digital asset firms.
In August 2024, the countryranked third in a crypto adoptionindex released by Henley & Partners, an investment migration consultancy firm.
On April 6, Dubai’s real estate and crypto regulatory authoritiessigned a new agreementaimed at expanding digital asset adoption in the real estate sector. The agreement will link Dubai’s real estate registry with property tokenization through a governance system.
Magazine:Bitcoin price consolidation likely as US Core PCE, manufacturing, and jobs reports print this week
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