# mBridge Related Articles

HTX News Center provides the latest articles and in-depth analysis on "mBridge", covering market trends, project updates, tech developments, and regulatory policies in the crypto industry.

Iran's Impact on the Dollar: The Perfect Storm of Petrodollars

The report analyzes the profound impact of the Iran conflict on the petrodollar system, the cornerstone of dollar hegemony since 1974. It argues that the system, where global oil purchases in dollars lead to surplus recycling into U.S. Treasuries, is under unprecedented strain from three layers of pressure: pre-existing structural cracks, new shocks from the conflict, and the long-term threat of energy transition. Key structural cracks include the U.S. no longer being the primary buyer of Middle Eastern oil due to its shale revolution, Saudi Arabia's push for defense autonomy, the development of alternative payment infrastructure like Project mBridge, and sanctions driving de-dollarization. The conflict itself is damaging U.S. security credibility, shifting control of the Strait of Hormuz, and potentially forcing a shift to yuan-for-oil arrangements. The analysis details five complex mechanisms linking oil prices and U.S. Treasury yields, which can push in opposite directions. Crucially, the old logic is failing: oil producers, damaged by conflict, may become net sellers of U.S. debt to fund reconstruction, just as U.S. fiscal deficits and debt supply surge. While short-term buffers exist, like U.S. energy independence, the long-term trend points towards a world with less dollar dominance. The core conclusion is that a world focused on defense and energy self-sufficiency will inherently hold fewer dollar reserves, signaling a slow but structural decline in the petrodollar system.

marsbit04/13 10:01

Iran's Impact on the Dollar: The Perfect Storm of Petrodollars

marsbit04/13 10:01

What Impact Does Interest-Bearing Digital Yuan Have on Hong Kong's Digital Finance?

China's digital yuan (e-CNY) has entered a new phase with the introduction of interest-bearing wallets starting January 2026, transitioning from a "digital cash" to a "digital deposit currency" model. This makes it the world’s first CBDC to pay interest to general users, fundamentally changing its legal nature from a central bank liability to a commercial bank liability, while still backed by sovereign credit. This innovation addresses a core challenge faced by global CBDC initiatives: avoiding financial disintermediation while promoting adoption. By allowing commercial banks to manage and profit from e-CNY deposits, China has turned a potential competitor into a integrated part of the banking system, creating sustainable incentives for adoption and enabling new monetary policy tools. For Hong Kong, interest-bearing e-CNY is transformative development. It enhances the city’s role as an offshore RMB hub by encouraging longer-term retention of digital yuan within its financial system, especially through platforms like mBridge. It also strengthens Hong Kong’s digital asset ecosystem by providing a high-credit settlement option for tokenized assets, enables new fintech innovations around programmable money, and complements—rather than competes with—Hong Kong’s own wholesale-focused digital Hong Kong dollar strategy. Together, these advances support Hong Kong’s ambition to become an international digital asset center.

marsbit01/01 08:12

What Impact Does Interest-Bearing Digital Yuan Have on Hong Kong's Digital Finance?

marsbit01/01 08:12

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