While Qatar maintains its strict official stance against speculative crypto trading and investment, the nation is simultaneously making significant headway in the broader digital asset space, particularly when it comes to asset tokenization. At a recent Gulf , financial leaders highlighted Qatar’s cautious but proactive approach to blockchain innovation through regulated channels.
While Qatar maintains its strict official stance against speculative crypto trading and investment, the nation is simultaneously making significant headway in the broader digital asset space, particularly when it comes to asset tokenization. At a recent Gulf , financial leaders highlighted Qatar’s cautious but proactive approach to blockchain innovation through regulated channels.
Yousef Al-Jaida, CEO of the Qatar Financial Centre (QFC), reiterated that the country’s central bank prohibits crypto trading and investment. This ban includes restrictions on accessing banking services for crypto-related activities. However, Al-Jaida emphasized that this policy does not preclude innovation in the digital asset ecosystem.
Instead of engaging with speculative crypto markets, Qatar is directing its efforts toward tokenizing real-world assets. Through its 2024 Digital Asset Regulation and Investment Token Rulebook, the QFC has created a controlled legal environment for developing digital financial products.
Al-Jaida described tokenization as a practical solution to economic challenges, particularly in sectors like real estate and private equity. Qatar digitizes illiquid assets such as commercial towers, Islamic finance products, and bonds via tokenized special purpose vehicles (SPVs).
This strategy aims to broaden investment access and inject liquidity into key sectors while containing risks within the QFC’s legal and regulatory framework. The approach enables controlled experimentation in a sandbox-like environment.
While Qatar has not signaled any move toward regulating stablecoins, other Gulf jurisdictions are embracing them. Ola Doudin, CEO of crypto platform BitOasis, noted that stablecoins are increasingly used in the region for remittances, freelancer payments, and business transactions.
Doudin emphasized that such use cases require a different regulatory approach from speculative crypto trading. However, the panel did not indicate that Qatar is considering regulatory changes around stablecoins at this time.
Panelists also discussed the importance of regulatory coordination across the Gulf. Emmanuel Givanakis, CEO of Abu Dhabi’s Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA), pointed to global frameworks, such as IOSCO’s guidelines for virtual assets, as key tools for regional alignment.
Al-Jaida echoed the sentiment, suggesting that Gulf financial hubs like ADGM (Abu Dhabi), DIFC (Dubai), and QFC (Qatar) could lead efforts to create “passporting” arrangements. These would allow licensed digital asset firms to operate across jurisdictions more easily, while discouraging activity on unregulated platforms.