HSBC and Standard Chartered Win Hong Kong’s Inaugural Stablecoin Licenses

Share This Post

The HKMA selected two issuers from a pool of 36 applicants under the Stablecoins Ordinance, which took effect in August 2025.

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) granted its first two stablecoin issuer licenses on Friday, awarding them to HSBC and Anchorpoint Financial, a joint venture led by Standard Chartered that includes Animoca Brands and Hong Kong Telecommunications.

The regulator selected the two from a pool of 36 applicants under the Stablecoins Ordinance, which took effect in August 2025. Both licensees are authorized to issue stablecoins pegged to the Hong Kong dollar.

The decision to award the first licenses to HSBC and Standard Chartered is notable, as both are among the only three commercial banks authorized to print physical Hong Kong dollar banknotes, a system dating back to 1846.

“The two applicants have experience in traditional finance and risk management, which fits the mission of stablecoins that aim to bridge traditional finance and digital finance,” said HKMA Deputy Chief Executive Darryl Chan.

Strict Guardrails

Hong Kong’s framework imposes tight requirements on issuers. Stablecoins must be fully backed by high-quality liquid assets such as cash, bank deposits, or short-term government securities. Issuers must maintain at least HK$25 million in paid-up capital and hold liquid capital equal to 12 months of operating expenses.

Holders must be able to redeem tokens at par within one business day, and issuers are prohibited from offering interest or yield on stablecoin holdings. The regime also bars algorithmic stablecoins from obtaining a license.

Financial Secretary Paul Chan had signaled in his February budget address that the first batch would be limited, with regulators prioritizing risk management, reserve quality, and anti-money-laundering controls.

Retail and Cross-Border Ambitions

HSBC said its HKD stablecoin will be available inside its PayMe app and HSBC HK Mobile Banking in the second half of 2026, giving retail customers direct access to the token. Anchorpoint plans to distribute through selected business partners.

The broader stablecoin market now exceeds $311 billion, though USD-denominated tokens account for nearly all of it. Hong Kong is betting that bank-issued, regulated HKD stablecoins can carve out a niche in regional trade settlement.

The licensing milestone also comes as mainland China explores renminbi-backed stablecoins through Hong Kong, and as state-owned enterprises like China National Petroleum Corporation study stablecoin use for cross-border payments.

This article was written with the assistance of AI workflows. All our stories are curated, edited and fact-checked by a human.

Related Posts

Tom Lee’s Bitmine (BMNR) bought $237 million worth of ether (ETH) last week

Bitmine Immersion (BMNR), the Ethereum treasury firm helmed by...

SUI drops 1.1%, leading index lower

CoinDesk Indices presents its daily market update, highlighting the...

Here’s Why Ethereum bears are targeting $1.8K ETH price

Ether’s (ETH) price printed a “bear pennant” on the...

Bitcoin (BTC), ether (ETH) prices slide while stocks gain alongside AI tokens: Crypto Markets Today

Bitcoin BTC$77,234.04 traded at $76,600 on Tuesday, down 0.8%...

Tom Lee Says Bitmine Could Be Included on Russell 1000 Index

Ether treasury company Bitmine Immersion Technologies has been included...

Chance For Bitcoin Rally To $82K Rises As Global Tensions Cool

Key takeaways:Declining oil prices boosted global stock markets, helping...