Key Takeaways:

A new stablecoin called ZARU launched. South African Rand on the global blockchain for the first time by creating ZARU.

It is a collaboration between financial institutions like Luno, Sanlam, EasyEquities, and Lesaka, ensuring trust and stability for users.

ZARU will be known for instant, low-cost payments 24/7, solving the problems of slow traditional banking hours and high fees.

South African Rand called Johannesburg is going digital. They debuted  ZARU, a new stablecoin which was designed to modernize how money moves in and out of South Africa. The goal is: creating a digital version of the Rand that is pegged 1:1 with the physical currency, but can move with the high speed and high efficiency of the blockchain.

How ZARU Works?

ZARU is developed by the ZAR Universal Network. Differ from cryptocurrencies that are so volatile such as Bitcoin, ZARU is designed to stay stable. With every digital ZARU token, there is real value to back up.

The reserves are a combination of cash, bank deposits, and South African government bonds. These assets are stored at Standard Bank and managed by Sanlam Specialised Asset Management. To make everything honest and transparent, the reserves will be audited every month by the accounting firm Moore Johannesburg and public.

A new stablecoin called ZARU launched

Solving Real-World Payment Problems

They created ZARU to fix the limitations of the traditional banking system. When sending Rand overseas or making large payments can be slow and expensive. Banks have limited operating hours, and international transfers can take several days to complete.

ZARU allows transactions 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Because it runs on the blockchain, adjustment is instant. Ali Mazanderani, an executive at Lesaka, focuses on the benefits for people and businesses. “This will reduce costs and increase speed for Rand payments.”

At this point, ZARU is only available to institutional investors, big companies and financial funds. However, the partnership plans to make it easy for retail users  later this year.

A “USDT” for South Africa?

This launch seems to be a catalyst for cross-border trade. South African businesses can participate in the global digital, they don’t need to convert everything into US Dollars. When creating an institutional stablecoin, these partners hope to make payment which money sent home by workers abroad will be much cheaper and easier.

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