Bank of North Dakota is leveraging its unique position as the nation’s only state-owned bank to launch the “Roughrider” stablecoin in partnership with Fiserv. The move aims to modernize its financial infrastructure and assert state-level sovereignty in the digital-asset space.…Bank of North Dakota is leveraging its unique position as the nation’s only state-owned bank to launch the “Roughrider” stablecoin in partnership with Fiserv. The move aims to modernize its financial infrastructure and assert state-level sovereignty in the digital-asset space.…

North Dakota stakes claim in crypto with Roughrider stablecoin

2025/10/09 02:42
2 min read
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Bank of North Dakota is leveraging its unique position as the nation’s only state-owned bank to launch the “Roughrider” stablecoin in partnership with Fiserv. The move aims to modernize its financial infrastructure and assert state-level sovereignty in the digital-asset space.

Summary
  • North Dakota teamed up with Fiserv to launch the dollar-pegged Roughrider stablecoin in 2026.
  • Designed for local banks, it aims to boost settlement speed and digital payments.
  • The move signals North Dakota’s push to modernize finance and embrace blockchain innovation.

According to a press release Oct. 8, the Bank of North Dakota (BND) has partnered with financial-services giant Fiserv to develop “Roughrider Coin,” a dollar-pegged stablecoin slated for a 2026 launch.

BND said the asset will be built on Fiserv’s proprietary digital-asset platform and is designed specifically for use by the state’s local banks and credit unions.

A state legacy meets blockchain innovation

The “Roughrider” moniker nods to the state’s history, honoring former President Theodore Roosevelt and his volunteer cavalry regiment. Beyond the symbolism, the coin has a clear mandate.

According to the release, its primary objectives are to increase the efficiency of bank-to-bank transactions, simplify cross-border money movement, and drive adoption among local merchants, creating a more integrated digital economy within the state. The North Dakota leadership is framing Roughrider as a necessary evolution of public finance.

The Roughrider coin will be the first state-issued stablecoin in the U.S. to launch on the Fiserv digital-asset platform, a blockchain payments system unveiled earlier this year alongside Fiserv’s own FIUSD stablecoin.

Fiserv’s involvement adds both technical credibility and scale. The Wisconsin-based fintech processes roughly 90 billion transactions annually across 10,000 financial institutions and six million merchant locations worldwide.

Roughrider’s launch also follows a growing trend of state experimentation with stablecoins. In August, Wyoming launched its own state-backed token under the Stable Token Commission, following new federal legislation that clarified how dollar-pegged digital assets can operate within U.S. financial law.

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