Key takeaways
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RMJDT is a ringgit stablecoin intended for cross-border payments and trade.
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Its treasury and validator setup is designed to make on-chain settlement work as trusted infrastructure.
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Across Asia, stablecoins are subject to licensing and reserve and redemption rules.
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Tokenized assets increase the demand for tokenized settlements in local currency, not just USD.
RMJDT is presented as a token linked to the ringgit and linked to the crown prince of Johor. It was launched by his company, Bullish Aim, and issued on Zetrix, a network connected to Malaysia’s national blockchain infrastructure.
The token is intended for payments and settlement of cross-border trade, with the project also announcing a Zetrix token treasury of 500 million Malaysian ringgits ($121 million) to support the network’s daily operations.
Across Asia, there is a broader move toward regulated tokenized currency, including stablecoins with clearer reserve and redemption rules and on-chain settlement systems designed for trading and tokenized assets. RMJDT is an example of this trend.
What is RMJDT?
RMJDT is marketed as a simple product, a ringgit-pegged stablecoin issued on the Zetrix blockchain by Bullish Aim, a company chaired and owned by Johor Regent Tunku Ismail Ibni Sultan Ibrahim.

The token is designed for everyday payments and cross-border commerce. It also aims to make the ringgit easier to use in a world where commerce online and across borders is increasing.
What sets the RMJDT apart is its structure. According to project information and reports, the RMJDT is expected to be backed by ringgit cash and short-term Malaysian government bonds, a conservative reserve model that regulators and large financial institutions tend to prefer because it is easier to explain and, in theory, easier to redeem.
The other half of the picture is a new digital asset treasury company (DATCO), funded by 500 million ringgit of Zetrix tokens, and which plans to expand this to 1 billion ringgit.
The project says this pool is intended to help keep transaction costs more stable and support the network by staking tokens tied to up to 10% of validator nodes.
Put simply, the goal is to make the use of RMJDT resemble the characteristics of a reliable payment system and less like something that changes character every time the crypto market gets noisy.
Did you know? Bank Negara Malaysia has previously worked with the BIS Innovation Hub on Project Dunbar, which built cross-border settlement prototypes using multiple central bank digital currencies with Australia, Singapore and South Africa.
Why now for a ringgit stablecoin: tokenized assets require tokenized settlement
A ringgit stablecoin makes more sense when you look at what Malaysia is trying to build next.
Bank Negara Malaysia has laid the foundation for asset tokenization within the regulated financial sector. RMJDT fits into this step-by-step approach, which starts with familiar instruments such as deposits, loans and bonds, and aims to introduce tokenized products to regulated markets from 2027 if the roadmap remains on track.
However, a recurring problem appears in almost all tokenization drivers. It is difficult to scale tokenized assets if the monetary part of the transaction still has to leave the chain.
Issuers can place a bond, unit of funds, or invoice on-chain, but if settlement continues to revert to bank transfers, the promise of instant settlement collapses due to integration work, cutoff times, and reconciliation.
This is why regional projects such as Singapore’s Project Guardian always come back to the same point. The choice of settlement asset, whether stablecoins, tokenized deposits, or other forms of regulated on-chain money, can determine whether tokenized markets actually take off.
In this sense, RMJDT represents Malaysia testing what on-chain settlement looks like in ringgit terms and defining what it might seek to symbolize next.
License the issuer, not the token
Asian regulators are increasingly deciding who is allowed to issue stablecoins and under what reserve rules, redemption conditions and supervisory frameworks.
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Hong Kong offers a clear example. Under the Stablecoins Ordinance, the issuance of fiat-referenced stablecoins became a regulated activity on August 1, 2025, and issuers are required to hold an HKMA license. The HKMA has also established a public register of approved issuers. The first licenses are only expected to be issued later, with authorities warning the market not to preempt the regulatory process.
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Singapore takes a similar foundation-focused approach, but it views stablecoins as part of a broader tokenized system. The Monetary Authority of Singapore is preparing stablecoin legislation that emphasizes strong reserves and reliable repayment, while also piloting tokenized MAS invoices and settlement experiments combining bank liabilities, regulated stablecoins and wholesale central bank digital currency (CBDC) initiatives.
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The Japanese approach channels stablecoin instruments through regulated structures such as trust beneficiary interest stablecoins, with issuance and redemption linked to trust banks and trust companies and subject to supervisory notification. It also deals with the processing of certain stablecoins as part of regulated electronic payment instrument services.
Did you know? Thailand and Malaysia have linked their real-time payment systems, PromptPay and DuitNow, through an official cross-border payment connection.
Malaysia’s regulatory environment
Activity on digital assets already falls within a defined framework supervised by the Securities Commission. The SC Digital Assets Guidelines set requirements for regulated players in areas such as exchanges and custody, and the SC also operates a dedicated Digital Assets Center which directs operators through the Recognized Market Operator pathway and custodian registration process.
Bank Negara Malaysia has also put tokenization on its agenda through a formal discussion paper on asset tokenization and a phased roadmap running from 2025 to 2027. The focus is on testing real financial sector use cases before anything is rolled out at scale.
In this context, the RMJDT seems to position itself within a broader approach of regulated experimentation.
Did you know? Malaysia is the world’s largest sukuk market, accounting for around a third of the world’s outstanding sukuk. Sukuk are Islamic financial certificates similar to bonds, structured to provide interest-free returns and backed by underlying assets or cash flows.
Risks and open questions
Reserves and redemptions
The first question is the unglamorous one that determines whether anything else matters: how RMJDT manages reserves and buyouts in practice.
Public messaging relies on a regulated sandbox framework and a reserve model meant to appear conservative, but the market will still seek clarity on fundamentals such as disclosure frequency, who verifies support and how operations work if redemptions increase.
Governance and neutrality
RMJDT is launching alongside a treasury vehicle explicitly intended to support the network economy and stake tokens to support a significant portion of validator capacity.
This can be seen as stability, but it also raises the clear question of where the line lies between supporting infrastructure and influencing the system itself.
Adoption
Cross-border trade settlement sounds compelling in a press release, but it ultimately depends on the integration: who owns the RMJDT, who provides liquidity, how currency conversion works, and whether counterparties actually want exposure to the on-chain ringgit rather than sticking to US dollars.
Malaysia’s own tokenization roadmap makes it clear that this is a step-by-step journey with pilots and feedback, not something that will happen overnight.
Regulatory hurdles
Finally, RMJDT arrives in a region where regulators are strengthening oversight of the issuance of stablecoins.
The Hong Kong regime is now in place with a strong emphasis on licensing and transparency. It’s a reminder of what traditional stablecoins increasingly look like in Asia: supervised issuers, clear rules and little tolerance for vague promises.
What the “royal stablecoin” reveals
So, what can we learn?
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First, this is another sign that local currency stablecoins are being treated as infrastructure. Messaging around RMJDT focuses on trade settlement and payments, and the project has a treasury structure designed to keep the network usable and predictable.
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Second, it highlights the sequencing taking shape in Asia: tokenized assets tend to come first in the policy conversation, followed by tokenized settlements. The central bank of Malaysia is explicitly executing a multi-year tokenization roadmap for the financial sector, and a ringgit-denominated settlement token is a natural fit in this direction.
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Third, it shows how the region draws a line between crypto and money. Hong Kong has moved stablecoin issuance into a licensing regime, Singapore combines stablecoin rules with token bill trials, and the Japanese framework routes stablecoin-like instruments through regulated issuer structures. RMJDT is part of this same environment, where credibility, reserves, buyback and governance matter at least as much as technology.
RMJDT shows how the conversation has changed in Asia. Stablecoins are being brought to the same standards as other payment instruments, and tokenization is increasingly being treated as market infrastructure.
When a ringgit-pegged token appears with a reserve model built around cash and government securities and a treasury designed to keep the system running smoothly, it suggests what the region could prioritize: regulated on-chain settlement for tokenized assets.


