Fidelity has officially expanded its digital asset offering with the launch of Fidelity Digital Dollar (FIDD), marking the asset manager’s first proprietary U.S. dollar–backed stablecoin.
We are excited to introduce Fidelity Digital Dollar (FIDD), a new stablecoin issued by Fidelity Digital Assets, NA and pegged 1:1 to the U.S. dollar.
Learn more and get started with FIDD: https://t.co/VlsKPR2BFY pic.twitter.com/wnOnXCRO03
— Fidelity Digital Assets (@DigitalAssets) February 4, 2026
The move is aimed squarely at institutional use cases, including faster settlement, liquidity management, and on-chain “digital cash” for trading and custody operations. According to Fidelity, the company will directly oversee both issuance and reserve management, integrating FIDD tightly with its existing Fidelity Digital Assets platform.
The announcement comes as major financial institutions increasingly seek regulated on-chain alternatives for settlement and collateral, a segment historically dominated by a small group of established stablecoin providers.
FIDD Positioned as a Settlement and Collateral Tool
Fidelity is positioning FIDD as a 1:1 USD-pegged token designed to function as an efficient exchange and settlement medium within its own infrastructure.
? NEW: Fidelity Enters the Stablecoin Market ?
? Fidelity Digital Assets has launched FIDD, a U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin (1:1), marking Fidelity’s official entry into the stablecoin space.
? Another major TradFi player moves deeper into digital assets.
? Stablecoin… pic.twitter.com/yZAtEbr8oF— TimesCrypto (@timescryptonews) February 4, 2026
On its stablecoin product page, Fidelity confirms that clients can buy or sell FIDD at $1 per token directly through the Fidelity Digital Assets platform.
The company emphasizes institutional applications, including:
Real-time transaction settlement
Short-term liquidity optimization
Digital collateral management, allowing assets to be posted or released seamlessly within blockchain-based markets
From a technical perspective, FIDD is deployed on the Ethereum mainnet, enabling compatibility with a wide ecosystem of wallets, exchanges, and decentralized finance tools.
However, Fidelity has made it clear that FIDD differs from crypto-native stablecoins. Transfers to certain restricted addresses will be blocked, underscoring Fidelity’s focus on compliance, controlled access, and traditional financial custody standards. This reflects a broader trend: large asset managers are bringing blockchain products to market while retaining centralized oversight and regulatory guardrails.
Competition Intensifies for the “Institutional Dollar”
With FIDD, Fidelity enters a rapidly evolving market where stablecoins are increasingly used as digital cash for instant settlement, while tokenized money market funds and Treasury-backed tokens compete for similar institutional use cases.
Fidelity first revealed plans to test a dollar stablecoin in early 2025. The public launch of FIDD now represents a significant step forward in that strategy.
Whether FIDD gains traction beyond Fidelity’s own ecosystem will be key. Adoption typically depends on deep integration across trading venues, custody platforms, and payment rails. The more embedded a stablecoin becomes in institutional workflows, the more likely it is to emerge as a core liquidity instrument.
As traditional finance continues to move on-chain, Fidelity’s entry signals that the race to build regulated, enterprise-grade digital dollars is accelerating.