hong kong’s new stablecoin regime is approaching a pivotal moment, with banks and fintechs awaiting the first Hong Kong stablecoin licenses. HSBC and Standard Chartered are frequently cited in industry discussions, but no recipients have been officially named, and early approvals are expected to be limited.
This report examines how a small first batch is likely under the city’s stablecoin framework, why the two banks are being closely watched, and what approval criteria and sandbox boundaries mean for an HKD-backed stablecoin’s early use cases.
HSBC and Standard Chartered not confirmed; HKMA expects a small first batch
As reported by Cointelegraph, the monetary authority expects “a very small number” of approvals in the first batch and has not confirmed any firms as first recipients. That stance underscores the regulator’s emphasis on stability, risk control, and operational readiness over speed.
Caixin Global reported the authority has received roughly 36 license applications, reinforcing the case for a measured rollout. With high scrutiny across AML, reserves, and redemption planning, early selections are likely to be narrow.
Why HSBC and Standard Chartered are positioned for early consideration
Standard Chartered has publicly aligned resources toward issuance via Anchorpoint Financial, a joint venture with Animoca Brands and HKT formed to apply under the regime. The structure signals intent to meet capital, technology, and compliance expectations typical of a bank-led stablecoin model.
Executives have framed an HKD-backed stablecoin as an extension of regulated payments and tokenised money within Hong Kong’s financial infrastructure. “to become one of the first issuers launching an HKD-backed stablecoin … bringing an innovative medium of exchange … securely usable by institutions and individuals,” said Mary Huen, CEO for Standard Chartered in Hong Kong & Greater China.
For HSBC, the South China Morning Post reported that CEO Georges Elhedery signaled interest in participating, contingent on appropriate regulation. That position indicates potential strategic alignment with the regime while preserving a conservative risk threshold.
HKMA approval criteria, sandbox limits, and HKD stablecoin use cases
According to the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the HKMA stablecoin regime sets a high bar requiring clear use cases, robust reserve management, strong anti–money-laundering controls, and credible redemption capabilities. The initial focus is user protection and operational resilience, meaning readiness will outweigh speed for early approvals.
The sandbox is not a shortcut to a license. The Blockchain Council has noted that participation is neither necessary nor sufficient for approval, indicating that testing does not substitute for full compliance with governance, risk, and operational standards.
For an HKD-backed stablecoin, near-term utility would center on regulated payments and institutional settlement within compliant wallets and platforms. Emphasis on redemption and AML implies designs that support timely convertibility into bank money at stable value and traceable flows, with broader consumer usage dependent on distribution and merchant acceptance over time.
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