Why Does Ledger’s ADI Integration Matter?
Ledger has added native support for the $ADI token, giving users a direct way to store and manage the asset through Ledger Wallet and the company’s hardware signing devices.
The token is tied to ADI Foundation’s ADI Chain, a UAE-linked layer-2 network focused on regulated stablecoins and tokenized real-world assets. ADI Foundation describes $ADI as the network’s native gas token, meaning it is used to pay for activity on the chain.
The integration gives ADI Chain a custody and signing path through one of the best-known hardware wallet providers in crypto. For institutional networks, that matters because custody, key management, and transaction signing are core requirements before banks, treasury teams, and payment firms can use blockchain infrastructure at scale.
ADI Chain is being positioned for institutional use cases including cross-border payments, treasury operations, and trade settlement. Its backers are trying to place the network inside a more regulated digital asset structure rather than a retail-first crypto model.
How Is ADI Chain Connected to UAE Stablecoin Infrastructure?
ADI Chain is backed by Abu Dhabi-based Sirius International Holding, a subsidiary of International Holding Company. The network also supports the DDSC stablecoin ecosystem launched with First Abu Dhabi Bank.
The UAE link is important because the country has been trying to build a regulated digital asset sector that includes payments, tokenization, custody, and stablecoin infrastructure. ADI Chain’s focus on stablecoins and tokenized assets fits that strategy, especially as financial institutions look for faster settlement tools without moving fully outside existing compliance frameworks.
The announcement follows a recently disclosed 110 million dirham DDSC transfer, worth about $30 million. International Holding Company described the transaction as one of the largest publicly disclosed stablecoin transfers executed in the United Arab Emirates.
For ADI Chain, that transfer gives the network a market reference point. The larger question is whether stablecoin activity in the UAE can move beyond headline transactions and into repeatable use across trade finance, corporate treasury, and cross-border settlement.
Investor Takeaway
Ledger support improves the operational setup around $ADI, but the larger story is institutional stablecoin infrastructure in the UAE. Adoption will depend on whether banks and corporates use these rails for recurring settlement, not only isolated transfers.
Why Are Non-Dollar Stablecoins Getting More Attention?
The ADI Chain development comes as non-dollar stablecoins are drawing more attention, even though the global market remains dominated by dollar-backed tokens.
Euro-denominated stablecoins account for more than 80% of the non-US dollar stablecoin sector, according to a March report from Dune Analytics commissioned by Visa. The report estimated the broader non-dollar stablecoin market at roughly $1.2 billion in supply, compared with a total stablecoin market of more than $300 billion.
That gap shows the scale problem facing local-currency stablecoins. They may be strategically important for payment sovereignty, regional settlement, and bank adoption, but they remain small compared with dollar tokens that already dominate crypto liquidity and trading pairs.
Dune said non-dollar stablecoins process about $10 billion in monthly transfer volume, with euro-backed tokens increasingly used for payments, remittances, payroll, and treasury operations. That use case overlaps with ADI Chain’s institutional focus, even though ADI’s market context is tied more closely to the UAE and tokenized real-world assets.
What Are The Regulatory Risks For Stablecoin Growth?
Regulation remains the main dividing line between stablecoin growth and stablecoin scale. In Europe, the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation introduced a formal framework for crypto asset service providers and stablecoin issuers, giving euro-backed tokens clearer legal status.
That clarity has not removed commercial friction. An April report from Blockchain for Europe said MiCA’s reserve and interest rules have made euro stablecoins safer but less competitive than dollar-backed alternatives. The report cited DeFiLlama data showing euro stablecoins account for less than 1% of global stablecoin volume despite the euro’s larger role in international finance.
The European Commission has opened a review of MiCA rules covering stablecoins, reserve requirements, and interest-bearing token products. The review shows that regulators are still trying to balance safety, competitiveness, and bank-like oversight for tokenized money.
European institutions are also pushing ahead with local-currency stablecoin infrastructure. On May 20, euro stablecoin consortium Qivalis said it expanded to 37 member institutions after adding 25 banks across 15 countries ahead of a planned launch later this year. The group said the initiative is aimed at building a regulated euro-denominated alternative to dollar-backed stablecoins.
For the UAE, the lesson is clear. Stablecoin infrastructure can attract institutional interest when it is tied to regulated banking partners, credible custody options, and real settlement use cases. Ledger’s ADI support strengthens one part of that stack. The harder test is whether ADI Chain and the DDSC ecosystem can turn that infrastructure into sustained transaction volume.
