The United Arab Emirates has entered discussions with the United States over establishing a bilateral currency swap line, a move that signals deepening financial integration between the two economies and could elevate the UAE into a select group of Washington’s key monetary partners.
Speaking at the “Make It In The Emirates” forum in Abu Dhabi, UAE Minister of State for Foreign Trade Thani Al Zeyoudi confirmed that negotiations are underway, describing the arrangement as part of an “elite group” framework currently limited to a handful of countries.
“This is not about financial support or bailout mechanisms,” Al Zeyoudi emphasized. “It reflects the scale and maturity of trade and investment flows between nations where such a facility becomes essential.”
Currency swap lines are agreements between central banks that allow them to exchange currencies directly, enabling smoother cross-border transactions while reducing reliance on volatile foreign exchange markets. Such mechanisms help lower transaction costs and hedge against exchange-rate risks, particularly in high-volume trade relationships.
At present, the Federal Reserve maintains permanent swap line arrangements with only five major central banks: the European Central Bank, Bank of England, Bank of Japan, Bank of Canada, and Swiss National Bank.
If finalized, a UAE–US swap line would mark a significant expansion of this tightly controlled network, underscoring the Gulf state’s growing strategic and financial relevance in global markets.
Analysts view the development as part of a broader shift in international finance, where select economies are being integrated into deeper liquidity-sharing frameworks with the US, reflecting both economic scale and geopolitical alignment.
