Hong Kong Grants First Stablecoin Licenses To HSBC And Standard Chartered Venture

By Yellow News
11 days ago
STABLE SURV WHEN STND USDC

Hong Kong'sfinancial regulator granted its first two stablecoin licenses on Apr. 10, approving HSBC and a joint venture backed by Standard Chartered, Animoca Brands and Hong Kong Telecom.

HKMA Approves Two From 36 Applicants

The Hong Kong Monetary AuthorityselectedAnchorpoint Financial Limited — the Standard Chartered-led joint venture — and The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation as registered stablecoin issuers.

Both secured approval under the Stablecoins Ordinance, a licensing framework enacted in Aug. 2025 for fiat-tied digital currencies.

The regulator received 36 applications in total. HKMA chief executive Eddie Yue had warned in February that only a "very small number" of licenses would come through in the initial round. He originally targeted March for the first batch, but the timeline slipped.

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Stablecoin Regulation Gains Global Traction

The two approved institutions now hold a first-mover advantage in Hong Kong's regulated stablecoin market.

Their head start comes at a time when governments worldwide have moved to formalize rules around fiat-pegged tokens, including the GENIUS Act signed into law in the United States by President Donald Trump.

Despite a broader downturn in digital assets, the stablecoin sector has held up. Data shows the combined stablecoin market cap has traded sideways near all-time highs since Q4 2025. Bitcoin(BTC) dropped more than 42% over the same stretch.

USDT and USDC Still Dominate

Two U.S. dollar-pegged assets — USDT(USDT) and USDC(USDC) — still account for the vast majority of total stablecoin supply. A euro-pegged token initiative from a consortium of major European banks could challenge that concentration. How much the competitive landscape shifts, though, remains an open question.

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