Stablecoin agentic payments are the UAE’s next differentiator | Opinion
Disclosure: The views and opinions expressed here belong solely to the author and do not represent the views and opinions of crypto.news’ editorial.
The UAE’s next competitive edge in digital assets lies not in pioneering new technology, but leading the convergence of two maturing ones: stablecoins and agentic AI. Stablecoins have emerged as crypto’s first mainstream use case, doubling to $46 trillion in total transaction volume over the last year.
- The UAE’s opportunity isn’t inventing new tech but converging two proven ones: pairing stablecoins (already mainstream at $46T in volume) with agentic AI creates a new payment primitive — autonomous, programmable, real-world transactions — before other hubs integrate the stack.
- Unlike competitors, the UAE is turning regulation into deployment: bank-issued, sovereign-backed stablecoins, national blockchain infrastructure, and explicit alignment with future machine-to-machine payments move it from pilots to production.
- Consumer, enterprise, and cultural readiness give the UAE a moat: high crypto adoption, high AI literacy, active merchant rollout, and a $4T Shariah-compliant finance niche combine into network effects other jurisdictions can’t easily replicate.
Meanwhile, agentic payments are projected to unlock a $3 trillion to $5 trillion retail revenue opportunity by 2030, as consumers delegate financial tasks to AI agents that optimise and transact on their behalf. The UAE can pair the cost-efficiency of stablecoins with the programmable logic of agentic AI to facilitate autonomous, real-world payments before other hubs catch up.
The exponential growth of the two technologies has fueled the race for digital asset leadership. Since the landmark passing of the U.S. GENIUS Act last year, over 70% of major financial hubs worldwide have made strides in their own regulatory frameworks for stablecoin issuance and innovation.
Most are exploring stablecoins and agentic payments on separate tracks, failing to recognise their complementary utility. The instances of integration are largely driven by private entities rather than government bodies.
Such uneven development presents a rare but narrow window of opportunity for a jurisdiction to claim the first-mover advantage. Given its forward-looking regulatory posture,
tech-savvy population, and expertise in Islamic finance, the UAE stands to establish itself as the go-to hub for stablecoin-led agentic payments.
From regulation to real-world Adoption
Regulation is a critical catalyst for real-world adoption, giving investors, developers, and consumers the green light to operate with confidence and scale. While jurisdictions like the European Union and Hong Kong focus on laying detailed regulatory groundwork, the UAE is concurrently translating regulation into bank-led adoption.
The CBUAE’s Payment Token Services Regulation became fully enforceable in 2025, enabling the licensing of selected foreign stablecoins and dirham-backed alternatives. This approach not only connects the UAE with international stablecoin liquidity but also encourages the development of localised offerings.
With regulatory guardrails in place, the UAE has begun mobilising the broader financial ecosystem to build the infrastructure needed for digital asset payments. A flagship example is the upcoming dirham-backed stablecoin launch by Abu Dhabi financial leaders IHC, ADQ, and First Abu Dhabi Bank.
In contrast to the narrow pilots of competitors, the sovereign-scale initiative is designed not only for current everyday business and consumer transactions, but also for the next generation of “machine-to-machine and AI” payments. This marks a proactive commitment to align digital assets with the fast-approaching era of agentic AI, even as the market for large-scale autonomous payments remains at an early stage.
The decision to run the stablecoin on the ADI blockchain also provides a dedicated, national-grade network for domestic and cross-border transactions alike. Taken together, the UAE’s combination of sovereign-linked investment backing, commercial bank issuance, and future-ready infrastructure positions it distinctly on the global stage.
A population ready for convergence
Emerging payment formats often stall at merchant acceptance and end-user trust, as regulatory compliance alone cannot bridge familiarity or convenience gaps. While other advanced markets like Singapore face an informed yet risk-cautious retail base, the UAE’s consumers are more engaged in both stablecoins and agentic AI.
The UAE has one of the highest rates of digital asset ownership in the world, ranking second in user penetration. Stablecoins have found a productive market amongst their young expatriate population, who leverage them for remittances and flexible on-chain payrolls.
The country also scores third place in AI literacy globally, with eight in ten shoppers assigning product research and price checks to AI agents. Beyond simple recommendations, these consumers increasingly look for payment experiences that are personalised and easy across the purchase lifecycle.
The UAE’s dual familiarity with stablecoins and agentic payments is set to shorten its early adoption curve, as the convergence is already aligned with existing consumer attitudes. Enterprises are accelerating this anticipated demand by collaborating with household brands rather than confining themselves to sandboxes.
For stablecoins, the fuel and convenience retailer ADNOC Distribution now accepts the AE Coin across its 980 service stations. On the agentic payments side, Mastercard teamed up with lifestyle provider Majid Al Futtaim and fintech Dataiera to launch Mastercard Agent Pay last November, allowing UAE cardholders to authorise AI agents to shop on their behalf. Although the two technologies are still operating on parallel lanes, such preliminary launches build the exposure, network effects, and operational readiness for advanced systems.
Carving a regional payments niche
Even though only a handful of jurisdictions are pursuing stablecoin-led agentic payments, observers might point to Singapore as a notable contender. The Monetary Authority of Singapore’s BLOOM Initiative is working closely with institutional partners to test digital currencies as settlement assets for agentic payment flows.
While the country is advancing in this area, different regulatory and market contexts result in varying adoption timelines. Nonetheless, a Singapore-based survey revealed that over half of respondents cite the need for stronger corporate governance and risk controls before broader adoption. Against this backdrop, the UAE’s actively involved user base holds a readiness edge.
Moreover, the UAE can differentiate its market by homing in on Shariah-compliant payment rails. The global Islamic finance industry is valued at $4 trillion across more than 80 countries, indicating a substantial demand for financial technology that serves the UAE’s Muslim demographic and the underserved international market. As the Middle East’s key digital assets hub, the UAE is poised to serve this segment.
The UAE’s multi-faceted strengths position it to spearhead stablecoin-led agentic payments. Although its efforts in the two technologies are still largely in tandem, the region’s inclusion of agentic payments in sovereign-scale stablecoin project plans, consumer readiness, and market for Shariah-compliant finance can create the network effects that other markets lack.
To capitalise on the first-mover advantage, the UAE should expedite the integration of both technologies and address teething issues in risks, standardisation, and scaling. Such measures create conducive conditions to support the next era of innovative, programmable money.