TL;DR
- HSBC and a Standard Chartered-led venture are expected among the first stablecoin licensees, putting note-issuing banks at the center of Hong Kong’s rollout.
- The HKMA has said only a small number of licences will be granted first, with reviews focused on use cases, reserves, AML and risk controls.
- Hong Kong’s rules already require licensing for fiat-referenced issuers, while early approvals would signal a bank-led, tightly supervised path for local stablecoins.
Hong Kong is approaching a landmark moment in digital-asset regulation, and the city’s first stablecoin approvals now appear close enough to reshape the competitive map. HSBC and a joint venture led by Standard Chartered are expected to be among the first recipients of stablecoin licences from the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, according to people familiar with the matter. The potential approvals would place two of the territory’s note-issuing banking groups at the center of a market Hong Kong hopes will reinforce its status as a regulated digital-asset hub. The timing, however, remains subject to change.
Bank-led issuers move to the front of the line
What stands out in the expected first batch is the regulator’s clear preference for institutions already embedded in Hong Kong’s monetary architecture. Authorities are prioritizing entities already authorized to issue banknotes, according to people familiar with the process, a choice that would naturally favor HSBC and Standard Chartered-led applicants. Hong Kong’s stablecoin regime requires licensing for any business issuing fiat-referenced stablecoins in the city or issuing Hong Kong dollar-linked stablecoins abroad, with rules around reserve management, redemption at par, segregation of client assets, anti-money laundering controls and broader risk governance under rules now in force.
The likely shape of the rollout also reflects a licensing approach designed to be narrow, cautious and highly selective from the outset. HKMA Chief Executive Eddie Yue said in February that only a “very small number” of licences would be granted initially, with reviews focused on use cases, risk management, anti-money laundering standards and the backing assets of the coins. People familiar with the matter have said approvals could arrive within two weeks, with March 24 cited as one possible date, though the final timetable and number of approvals have not yet been formally fixed.
For the market, the message is that Hong Kong wants stablecoins to develop inside bank-grade guardrails rather than through a crypto-native free-for-all. That is why the expected early winners matter so much. HSBC did not join the regulator’s sandbox, making its apparent lead position more notable, while Standard Chartered had already moved publicly through Anchorpoint Financial, its venture with Animoca Brands and HKT, to pursue a Hong Kong dollar-backed coin. If the first approvals land as expected, Hong Kong will be signaling that credibility, existing regulatory integration and balance-sheet trust come before experimentation for now.






