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Japan eyes yen stablecoins and crypto ETFs – What it means for XRP

Japan eyes yen stablecoins and crypto ETFs – What it means for XRP

Japan eyes yen stablecoins and crypto ETFs – What it means for XRP

Across Asia, regulators continue to tighten stablecoin rules as governments aim to control risk and improve payment efficiency. Japan, Singapore, and Hong Kong enforce licensing, reserve backing, and redemption standards to make digital tokens behave like regulated financial instruments.

At the same time, the Ripple [XRP] ecosystem records steady activity. It processes 1.83 million daily transactions and holds 7.3 million addresses, which signals consistent network use rather than speculative spikes.

Meanwhile, stablecoin value on XRPL rose above $760 million, while active addresses stayed near 35,000. As a result of clearer regulations, investors and developers are shifting focus toward infrastructure instead of short-term trading.

Source: DeFiLlama

In fact, Brinc and Ripple are funding startups in Hong Kong that build payment and settlement tools on XRPL. This shift shows Asia moving toward regulated settlement rails that connect blockchain systems directly with traditional finance.

Japan advances Stablecoins and ETF rules

Japan has moved to formalize stablecoin settlement and crypto ETF rules as it responds to shifting global financial dynamics.

On the 1st of June, a ruling party panel urged the government to expand yen-based stablecoin use for Asian settlement while also creating a legal framework for crypto ETFs.

Source: Reuters

The proposal aimed to structure adoption as dollar stablecoins dominate cross-border liquidity and pressure increases for local alternatives. Meanwhile, Japanese banks test joint stablecoin issuance, and JPYC circulates yen-pegged tokens in limited use within a cash-heavy economy.

Source: Reuters

In parallel, the FSA supports blockchain pilots focused on internal efficiency. Overall, Japan channels crypto into regulated financial instruments.

In fact, Bank ​of Japan Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino advocated a balanced monetary system approach, cautioning against relying solely on CBDCs or stablecoins in future financial design.

That said, XRP Open Interest across major exchanges has pulled back after earlier spikes.

On Bybit, positions fell sharply by 36% from a May peak of $283 million to around $181 million, marking a clear reset driven by deleveraging during the recent sell-off and long liquidations.

Source: CryptoQuant

Binance, however, has remained relatively stable. Open Interest only eased slightly to $246 million, just 2.4% below its June high of $252 million, keeping it dominant in futures activity.

At the same time, XRP rebounded above $1.14 after dipping to $1.055, posting gains of over 8%.

All together, one side of the market has flushed leverage, while the other still holds elevated positioning that could shape the next directional move.


Final Summary

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