
Partnership could pave the way for digital commodities markets and modernized trading infrastructure.
Dubai Multi Commodities Centre (DMCC), one of the world’s largest global trade hubs, and crypto exchange Crypto.com have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to explore blockchain-based tokenisation of commodities.
The agreement aims to reduce inefficiencies in trade and settlement while developing digital trade infrastructure.
Collaboration Focus
Under the MoU, DMCC and Crypto.com will investigate how distributed ledger technology can improve settlement friction, enhance price transparency, and expand access across commodities such as precious metals, diamonds, energy products, and agricultural goods.
The organisations will explore whether tokenised commodities can be listed on the Crypto.com Exchange, pending regulatory approvals. They will also evaluate custody models, liquidity‑facilitation mechanisms, and digital‑asset payment solutions on DMCC platforms and for selected member use cases.
The partnership builds on DMCC’s engagement with the Dubai Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA), which seeks to integrate tokenised commodities into broader financial systems.
DMCC leadership described tokenisation as a “structural opportunity” to modernise traditional trading and increase market transparency.
Education and Technical Initiatives
Reportedly, Crypto.com will collaborate with the DMCC Crypto Centre on educational and technical programs.
Planned initiatives include workshops, hackathons, and capability-building activities aimed at deepening institutional understanding of tokenised assets and supporting responsible innovation in Dubai’s expanding Web3 ecosystem.
Market Context and Outlook
DMCC hosts more than 26,000 companies across sectors such as energy, metals, diamonds, agriculture, and technology. Its ecosystem includes over 3,400 technology firms, positioning it as a major hub for trade innovation, bridging traditional commodities and digital assets.
Senior executives from both organisations emphasized that the partnership remains exploratory. Any practical applications of tokenised commodities will depend on regulatory compliance and technical validation, though they highlighted the potential of real-world digital assets to enhance financial infrastructure and market efficiency.
Why this matters
The partnership could accelerate the digitisation of commodities trading, making settlement faster, prices more transparent, and market access broader.
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