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Hong Kong Delays First Stablecoin Licences, HKMA Cites Ongoing Review - Crypto Economy
TL;DR:
Hong Kong’s first stablecoin licences were expected by the end of March, but the deadline passed without a single public approval. Instead, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority said only that the process is still moving forward and that more details will be announced in due course. A regulatory rollout that was meant to signal momentum is suddenly defined by delay, leaving applicants, investors, and the wider crypto sector wondering whether Hong Kong’s carefully built stablecoin framework is proving harder to execute than officials first suggested when the city positioned itself as a digital asset hub.
Why the delay matters
The missed target stands out because officials had outlined a narrow approval path. HKMA chief executive Eddie Yue told lawmakers in February that only a small number of issuers would be cleared in the first round, with reviews centered on use cases, risk management, anti money laundering controls, and the quality of backing assets. The message from regulators has never been about speed, but about selectivity, and that now appears to be defining the pace. Even so, the lack of a revised timetable has made the market read caution where it expected a cleaner launch.

That caution is embedded in the rulebook. Hong Kong’s regime requires stablecoin issuers to fully back tokens with high quality liquid reserves, redeem within one business day, and maintain a physical presence in the city, alongside broader Know Your Customer and transaction monitoring obligations. The framework is built to prioritize credibility over rapid issuance, which helps explain why approvals may be taking longer than expected. Early expectations had pointed to a small first cohort that could include large financial names, yet officials have not confirmed any successful applicants or disclosed who remains under active review.
The timing matters because stablecoin regulation sits near Hong Kong’s push to become a global crypto and fintech hub. Major fintech groups had been preparing to pursue licences under the new regime, but the broader backdrop has grown more complicated after mainland Chinese regulators raised concerns in late 2025 about privately controlled digital currencies. What looked like a straightforward licensing milestone now carries larger strategic weight, because every delay affects how investors judge Hong Kong’s ability to balance innovation, regulatory discipline, and political sensitivity while still delivering on its ambition to lead in digital finance.