AllUnity has launched SEKAU, the first stablecoin fully backed 1:1 by Swedish krona (SEK), as part of the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulations. According to the company’s statement, SEKAU is issued as an electronic money token and backed by SEK reserves held with regulated business partners, guaranteeing its parity with the national currency.
Multi-network expansion
SEKAU is now available on the Ethereum, Solana, Base, Tempo, and Polygon blockchains, with plans to expand to additional networks in the future. AllUnity emphasized that this multi-chain approach aims to ensure SEKAU can be used across diverse blockchain ecosystems while maintaining a consistent reserve and redemption framework on each supported network.
As a fintech startup specializing in regulatory-compliant digital currency solutions, AllUnity has built a robust operational infrastructure for SEKAU. The Banking Circle will serve as the reserve and settlement bank, holding fiat currency reserves and managing liquidity. Marginalen Bank is supporting the banking layer for the launch, while Trust Anchor Group provides integration and digital asset connectivity services.
AllUnity noted that institutional clients will initially be able to mint and redeem SEKAU via its business platform, with access to be extended to additional transaction platforms as adoption increases.
An alternative to dollar-based stablecoins
Currently, stablecoin markets are dominated by US dollar-pegged assets, making dollar-linked tokens the default means of settlement for most cryptocurrency transactions. By introducing SEKAU as a regulated Swedish krona stablecoin on blockchain, AllUnity offers an alternative option for digital value transfer.
The availability of a SEK-backed stablecoin allows Swedish companies and institutions to transfer value digitally without first converting to dollar-based stablecoins. This development also highlights a broader trend across Europe, where regulators with frameworks like MiCA are working to bring stablecoins into the formal financial system rather than leaving them in legal gray areas.
Momentum for regulated digital currencies
If SEKAU gains widespread adoption, other European countries with strong digital banking infrastructures may move to tokenize their own currencies. Under this scenario, dependence on dollar-based stablecoins for regional payment flows could gradually decrease over time.
The article also points out that this new wave of stablecoins is positioned less as independent crypto assets and more like regulated bank money. These tokens are designed to operate in alignment with mainstream financial systems, establishing a clear link between blockchain networks and traditional banking infrastructure.
In addition to SEKAU, AllUnity has launched another stablecoin called CHFAU, pegged 1:1 to the Swiss franc. The company states that CHFAU is tailored for institutional settlement and cross-border payments, following a similar structure to the previously released euro-backed token.




