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- Hong Kong: No offshore yuan stablecoin has been approved
Hong Kong’s central bank has denied issuing any license for a stablecoin pegged to the offshore yuan in the city, refuting a flurry of media reports on an upcoming token.
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) warned investors against getting roped into stablecoin projects that claim to have received a stablecoin license in the city. In a statement posted on WeChat, the watchdog noted that it had yet to issue any license under its Stablecoin Ordinance, which took effect on August 1. Any token promoted as regulated by the HKMA is illegal under Hong Kong laws, it added.
The warning comes just days after AnchorX, a fintech firm based in the city, announced that it was set to issue the first stablecoin pegged to the offshore yuan. Known as AxCNH, it targets cross-border payments between offshore Chinese companies and their trading partners along the Belt and Road regions.
HKMA becomes the latest regulator in the city to warn against rising digital currency fraud risk following the implementation of the Stablecoin Ordinance. A month ago, the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) cautioned against a rise in companies jumping on the stablecoin bandwagon to lure investors without any concrete products.
SFC CEO Julia Leung urged investors to watch out for projects that tout “misleading prospects of gains from short-term price volatility and be wary of unsubstantiated claims, particularly those appearing on social media.”
Hong Kong’s cautious optimism
When Hong Kong introduced the Stablecoin Ordinance, industry experts anticipated a surge in stablecoin issuers in the city, competing for dominance in the emerging Asian stablecoin market.
However, the HKMA was quick to temper expectations of a sharp surge in issuance licenses. Two months ago, HKMA chief executive Eddie Yue stated that the central bank would only issue a handful of licenses, and that “a large number of applicants will be disappointed.”
The Stablecoin Ordinance has also imposed onerous capital, liquidity, and AML requirements on issuers, frustrating many small players who claim the compliance costs are too high. Industry sources say that these firms, which initially expressed interest in the license, are now waiting for industry giants like Alibaba-affiliated (NASDAQ: BABA) Ant Group and e-commerce giant JD.com (NASDAQ: JD) to complete the entire process before they apply.
Certik’s Esme Pau noted that the city’s strict requirements have become a hurdle for interested applicants, most of whom can’t meet the capital requirements.
“Such obligations create a challenging calculus: obtaining a license under the existing regime may limit near-term profitability, which explains fading market enthusiasm,” he stated.
However, industry leaders say that the framework makes the city’s stablecoin sector one of the safest globally, potentially attracting more users.
“It puts it ahead of almost any other Asian jurisdiction, because no other Asian jurisdiction has a stablecoin law that allows you to license it from central bank. It’s going to be a blueprint for others,” commented Yat Siu, fou