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#HKStablecoinLicensesDelayed
Hong Kong's first batch of compliant stablecoin licenses did not materialise as expected by the end of March 2026, marking one of the most closely watched regulatory misses in the city's ongoing push to cement itself as a global digital asset hub. The delay has drawn attention from market participants, analysts, and the broader crypto industry, all of whom had been counting down to what was widely described as a landmark moment for regulated stablecoins in Asia.
The story begins well before the missed deadline. Hong Kong's Stablecoins Ordinance officially took effect on August 1, 2025, establishing the legal framework under which any person or entity carrying on a regulated stablecoin activity within the territory is required to be licensed by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, commonly referred to as the HKMA. The law represented years of preparation, public consultations, and sandbox exercises, and its arrival was treated as a signal that Hong Kong was serious about becoming the most credible jurisdiction in Asia for issuing digital payment instruments backed by fiat reserves.
Expectations for the first licenses rose sharply when senior officials made unusually direct public commitments. At Consensus Hong Kong, the city's flagship digital asset conference held on February 11, 2026, Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu stated that stablecoin licenses would be issued within the next month. Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po echoed that stance, saying in his February 25 budget speech that the government intended to issue a small number of stablecoin issuer licenses in the first batch specifically in March. These were not vague assurances but precise, calendar-pinned commitments made in front of the industry.
When March came and went without a single license being granted, the silence from the HKMA drew immediate attention. The authority subsequently confirmed through a spokesperson that it was actively taking forward the licensing matter and would announce further details in due course. That language, deliberately cautious and unbounded by any new timeline, left the market in a state of uncertainty. As of April 1, 2026, no licenses have been issued and no revised target date has been publicly communicated.
People familiar with the matter describe the delay as a deliberate choice by regulators to prioritize rigorous risk controls over meeting a self-imposed deadline. The HKMA is understood to be in the process of revising certain submission requirements from applicants, particularly around reserve asset disclosure, redemption arrangements, and stress testing under extreme market conditions. The diversity of applicants, spanning global banking institutions, traditional finance firms, and Web3-native companies, has reportedly added complexity to the review process, as regulators seek standards that apply meaningfully across very different corporate structures and risk profiles.
Weng Xiaoqi, chief executive of Bitfire Group Holdings, noted that regulators may need more time to finalize requirements precisely because of the range of institutions involved. A bank-backed stablecoin and a Web3-native stablecoin present fundamentally different operational models, and the HKMA appears unwilling to grant a license that could later become a source of embarrassment or systemic risk. As of September 2025, 36 companies had formally applied for licenses, a number that signals both genuine industry appetite and a heavier-than-expected review burden for the regulator.
Market expectations have centered heavily on two institutions as the most likely first recipients. HSBC Holdings and Standard Chartered are both note-issuing banks in Hong Kong, giving them a symbolic and operational significance that goes beyond their size. Standard Chartered's subsidiary in Hong Kong formed a joint venture called Anchorpoint Financial, in partnership with Animoca Brands and HKT, and Anchorpoint was the first entity to publicly announce its intent to apply for a license when the Stablecoins Ordinance came into force. Bloomberg reported in March 2026 that both HSBC and Standard Chartered were set to be among the inaugural recipients, though neither has confirmed the status of their applications publicly. For a second wave of approvals, sources point to Futu Securities and OSL Group as strong contenders.
Analysts have largely framed the delay as administrative rather than a reflection of any fundamental problem with the licensing regime or the broader strategy. Jack Poon, a member of the task force on promoting Hong Kong's Web3 development and a professor of fintech at Hong Kong Polytechnic University, stated that the delay is unlikely to be caused by market conditions. He described it as more likely related to ensuring all compliance items are thoroughly checked, or to giving applicants time to refine how their stablecoins will be positioned for practical use going forward.
The stakes for getting this right are considerable. Hong Kong's broader crypto strategy, which began taking shape in 2022 with the licensing of virtual asset exchanges, has been built on the premise that institutional credibility and regulatory precision will attract the kind of participants that looser jurisdictions cannot. Granting bank-backed stablecoin licenses would represent a significant escalation of that strategy, opening potential pathways into payments, cross-border remittances, and tokenized asset settlement. If two of the city's note-issuing banks are permitted to issue stablecoins fully compliant with local law, the practical implications for the financial system extend well beyond the crypto industry.
The delay also arrives at a moment when the global stablecoin landscape is moving fast. Total stablecoin market capitalization reached a record of around 313 billion dollars in March 2026 according to data from DefiLlama, with the vast majority denominated in US dollars. Non-dollar stablecoins, including Hong Kong dollar-pegged instruments which would logically emerge from a licensed framework in the city, remain a small fraction of that total. Europe's regulatory intervention, while initially disrupting the market, ended up creating conditions for euro-denominated stablecoin growth. Hong Kong's regulators are almost certainly watching those dynamics closely as they finalize their own approach.
For now, the HKMA's cautious posture sends a clear message: the authority would rather be thorough than fast. Whether that caution translates into confidence or frustration among applicants and the broader industry will depend heavily on what comes next and how soon. The market built its expectations around the assurances of the city's most senior officials. The longer the silence continues, the more those assurances will be tested.