Hong Kong Delays HKD Stablecoin License Rollout

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Hong Kong pushed back its HKD stablecoin license rollout, missing the March 2026 deadline. As of April 1, 2026, no issuer has received approval under the Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s (HKMA) AML and KYC-focused framework. The HKMA plans to issue only a limited number of licenses at first, prioritizing reserve backing and risk controls. Major banks like HSBC and Standard Chartered are seen as likely early applicants.
stablecoin news hong kong stablecoin

Key Insights:

  • Stablecoin news: Hong Kong missed its March licensing target
  • HKMA is still reviewing issuers under tighter AML and KYC rules
  • HSBC and Standard Chartered-linked efforts remain in focus

Stablecoin news out of Hong Kong took a more cautious turn after the city missed its own March 2026 target for issuing the first HKD stablecoin licenses. The Hong Kong Monetary Authority has not approved any issuer yet, even though officials had signaled that the rollout would begin in March.

Public records still show no licensed stablecoin issuer as of April 1, 2026, suggesting a slower transition from policy design to market launch.

The HKMA’s own framework says applicants will be judged on licensing procedures, supervision standards, and anti-money laundering rules. As reported in February, HKMA Chief Executive Eddie Yue expected only a “very small number” of licenses at first. The reviews focus on use cases, risk management, AML measures, and reserve backing.

Why Hong Kong Stablecoin Reviews are Taking Longer?

The current pause fits the structure Hong Kong has spent years building. The HKMA says its stablecoin regime grew out of consultation work that included a December 2023 legislative proposal and later licensing guidance. The government then set August 1, 2025, as the date when the Stablecoins Ordinance took effect, making fiat-referenced stablecoin issuance a regulated activity in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong Stablecoin News | Source: X
Hong Kong Stablecoin News | Source: X

That legal framework gives the regulator room to move carefully. The HKMA has already published supervision guidance and a dedicated AML and counter-financing guideline for licensed stablecoin issuers. It also maintains a public register for approved firms, which still shows no names.

From a market perspective, the delayed rollout adds short-term uncertainty but also reinforces the message Hong Kong has repeated since 2025: it will allow crypto growth only under bank-grade compliance standards. That could slow launch timing now, while improving credibility later for institutions that want a regulated path into tokenized payments and settlement.

Stablecoin News Keeps Banks and Issuers in the Spotlight

Even with the delay, major names remain central to the Hong Kong stablecoin story. TheCoinRepublic reported in February 2025 that Standard Chartered, HKT, and Animoca Brands planned a joint venture to apply for a Hong Kong dollar-backed stablecoin license. The bank said it made efforts for crypto-native use cases and both domestic and cross-border payments.

More recent reporting has also pointed to HSBC and the Standard Chartered-led venture as likely early recipients once approvals begin, though the HKMA has published no final list. Hong Kong still has the rulebook, the licensing channel, and institutional interest. What it does not yet have is its first approved issuer.

For now, the Hong Kong stablecoin policy remains intact, but execution has been pushed to April. The regulator’s public position is that the licensing matter is still advancing and that more details will be available in due course. Until that changes, stablecoin news in Hong Kong will focus on compliance, timing, and which applicants are in the best position to clear the final review.

The post Stablecoin News: Hong Kong Slows HKD License Rollout appeared first on The Coin Republic.

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