This article is selected from "Fudan Financial Review"
Authors: Gao Huasheng, Deputy Party Branch Secretary, Vice Dean, Professor and Doctoral Supervisor of Finance at Fudan International School of Finance, long-term researcher of crypto assets, author of the series "Stablecoins: The Future of Digital Finance"; Xu Bo, Postdoctoral Researcher at Fudan International School of Finance
On April 10, 2026, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) officially issued the first batch of stablecoin issuer licenses to Anchor Financial Technology Co., Ltd. and The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited.
With this, Hong Kong has essentially completed the institutional closed loop of "legislation-review-licensing" for fiat-backed stablecoins and has taken the lead in advancing stablecoin regulation to the implementation and business preparation stage.
The importance of this event lies not only in Hong Kong issuing the first batch of licenses, but also in the fact that the functional positioning of stablecoins in Hong Kong is changing. They are no longer just auxiliary tools in crypto asset trading but are explicitly embedded in real-world financial activities such as cross-border payments, local payments, tokenized asset trading, and programmable finance. In other words, Hong Kong's push for stablecoins is not about creating new speculative narratives, but rather an attempt to shape them into part of the digital financial infrastructure.
Judging from the composition of the first batch of licensees, this institutional signal is particularly clear. Anchor Financial Technology was jointly established by Standard Chartered Bank (Hong Kong), Hong Kong Telecom, and Animoca Brands, while HSBC became the other first-batch licensed institution. This combination indicates that Hong Kong's first batch of stablecoins is not a simple legitimization of "crypto-native projects," but rather resembles an institutional integration of bank credit, payment gateways, and on-chain capabilities.
More notably, the HKMA received applications from 36 institutions before the first application deadline, ultimately issuing licenses to only 2 institutions, resulting in a first-batch approval rate of only about 5.6%, and explicitly stated that the number of licenses will remain "very limited" in the future. This shows that Hong Kong is not taking a lenient, expansionary route, but rather one of high-threshold, selective access.
The reason why Hong Kong's licensing is noteworthy also lies in the fact that its "first-mover advantage" is not just a slogan. On May 21, 2025, the Hong Kong Legislative Council passed the Stablecoin Bill; on May 30, the Ordinance was gazetted; on August 1, the Stablecoin Ordinance officially came into effect; and by April 10, 2026, the first batch of licenses were officially issued. Hong Kong has completed the entire chain of "legislation-review-licensing".
In comparison, although the stablecoin-related provisions in the EU's MiCA have been applicable since June 30, 2024, the overall framework will not be fully applicable until December 30, 2024; the UK FCA's new cryptoasset business application window is not set to open until September 30, 2026, with the new rules expected to take effect on October 25, 2027. At least in terms of the pace of regulatory implementation, Hong Kong has already taken the lead among major international financial centers.
More importantly, Hong Kong doesn't just have licenses; it also has use cases. The Hong Kong government completed the issuance of its first HK$800 million tokenized green bond as early as February 2023, and issued another approximately HK$6 billion digital green bond in February 2024, covering currencies including HKD, RMB, USD, and EUR. Meanwhile, the e-HKD Phase 1 has attracted participation from 16 institutions, covering 6 types of application scenarios; the Project Ensemble Sandbox has also been initiated and is gradually entering a new stage supporting real-value transactions. In other words, this licensing round in Hong Kong is not about starting a story from scratch, but is built upon a set of already somewhat formed on-chain financial experiments and infrastructure.
Of course, the importance of Hong Kong's licensing should not be simplistically interpreted as it being about to immediately rewrite the global stablecoin landscape. The total market capitalization of the global stablecoin market has now reached $317 billion, an increase of over 50% since the beginning of 2025; but structurally, over 90% of fiat-backed stablecoins are still pegged to the US dollar, with USDT and USDC together accounting for about 93% of the total market value.
This means that on-chain finance has not fundamentally rewritten the global monetary power structure thus far, but has, to a considerable extent, continued the dominant position of US dollar credit, US dollar assets, and US dollar liquidity. Hong Kong's breakthrough here lies more in pioneering a more institutionalized, verifiable, and implementable development path for non-USD stablecoins in the short term rather than directly challenging the dollar.
Viewed within the broader context of China's digital finance, the true significance of Hong Kong's licensing may not lie in whether the mainland immediately replicates a set of RMB stablecoin regulations, but rather in how it further highlights a more layered arrangement: within the territory, using the digital yuan to safeguard the legal tender, retail payments, and regulatory bottom line; outside the territory, using Hong Kong as an offshore regulatory testing ground to explore the application boundaries of compliant stablecoins in cross-border payments, on-chain settlement, and tokenized asset trading.
The digital yuan leans more towards official leadership and domestic institutional construction, while Hong Kong's licensed stablecoins are closer to offshore markets, international payments, and on-chain trading scenarios. The two are not necessarily a substitute relationship but are more likely to form a pattern of layered advancement and mutual complementarity.
However, necessary restraint should be maintained. An institutional closed loop does not equal a market closed loop, and the first license issuance does not mean the competitive landscape is set. Whether HKD stablecoins can truly succeed still depends on whether they can form strong enough network effects, payment demand, and scenario stickiness. Especially given the clear first-mover advantage already established by USD stablecoins, whether the Hong Kong model can evolve from a "high-quality example" to a "system with scaled influence" still requires time to test.
Overall, the issuance of Hong Kong's first batch of stablecoin licenses is indeed an important node in the evolution of global stablecoin regulation. What is truly worth paying attention to is not how much market success Hong Kong has already achieved, but that it has率先 provided an institutional sample that can be observed, tested, and iterated upon.
By issuing only 2 licenses from 36 applications, Hong Kong has not taken a step of indiscriminate expansion, but rather conducted a high-threshold screening for the next generation of digital financial infrastructure. Whether this path can succeed in the future does not depend on how many licenses are issued, but on whether institutional credit, real-world scenarios, payment networks, and on-chain asset circulation can be truly integrated into a system.





