A CoinDesk report on Nov 11, 2025 describes plans to enable stablecoin payments in Singapore through partnerships between banks, card schemes and payment processors. The coverage sets out how integration and issuer responsibilities could be apportioned across the ecosystem, and highlights the technical and commercial steps outlined by participants.
The arrangement names Standard Chartered as a supporter of tokenised payment flows for DeCard cards issued under the programme, with settlement and issuer relationships routed through card networks. In this context, the initiative relies on established clearing rails rather than creating a standalone crypto exchange; that approach emphasises interoperability with incumbent payment infrastructure rather than displacing it.
The report adds that the launch will involve the DCS Card Centre and links to Diners Club Singapore, which brings over 50 years of card-issuing heritage to the project.
DeCard‘s plan includes virtual account services to segregate fiat on- and off-ramps, aiming to simplify merchant reconciliation and issuer reporting. It is designed to make settlement flows more transparent for acquirers and issuers, while easing operational reconciliation for merchants. Indeed, industry observers commonly point to virtual-account segregation as a standard tool in bank-led tokenisation pilots. Meanwhile, API connectivity is central: providers will expose APIs for tokenisation, authorisation and settlement to enable real-time routing.
The Singapore launch will position the offering within regulated payment infrastructure and rely on card-issuing partners, rather than custodial overlays. As a result, cardholders will interact with a branded decard dcs card accepted where Diners Club Singapore is supported, with issuer controls retained by partners and settlement handled through conventional rails.


