Hong Kong Stablecoin License “Footwear Dropped,” A Breakthrough in the De-dollarization Battle for Financial Pricing Power



10 April 2026, Hong Kong’s financial history迎来转折点。

Whether you are a value investor in A-shares, a speculator in Hong Kong stocks, or a “watcher” in the crypto world, today’s afternoon mobile push notifications were dominated by the same news: The Hong Kong Monetary Authority officially issued the first stablecoin issuer license to “Dingdian Financial,” a joint venture between HSBC and Standard Chartered.

Stimulated by this news, Hong Kong stocks’ Guotai Junan International surged nearly 30% intraday, and the digital currency sector in A-shares rose across the board.

As an in-depth observer who has witnessed several bull and bear cycles, my first reaction to this news was: the era of rough-and-ready has ended, but a bigger game has just begun.

Many people see this move simply as “legalization of crypto trading,” but if you think so, you might miss the biggest financial card swap of 2026. Below, I will combine exclusive data and macro logic to decode the true mystery behind this “financial defense battle.”

01 Why HSBC and Standard Chartered? A “National Team” Precise Replacement

Before interpretation, we need to see a fact: The Hong Kong Monetary Authority received 36 applications, but only 2 were approved.

This is not inclusive finance, but elite screening of the best.

Who are the shortlisted candidates? On one side is HSBC, which has the authority to issue banknotes; on the other side is the “Super Alliance” formed by Standard Chartered, Hong Kong Telecom, and Anli Group.

Core insight: The essence of stablecoins is not “coins,” but financial infrastructure in the digital age. Hong Kong’s Monetary Authority Chief Executive Yu Weiwen clearly stated that licensing thresholds are very high, mainly focusing on two points: one is risk management capability, and the other is specific application scenarios.

This means Hong Kong has completely abandoned the rough logic of “issuing coins and then fleeing” in the Web3 industry. Giving the minting rights to traditional banks with a century of risk control experience and under tier-3 regulation is equivalent to directly maximizing the credit level of digital finance.

Previously, when using USDT, we were always worried whether Tether’s reserves were sufficient and whether US regulators would freeze it with a ban order. Now, Hong Kong has set a strict rule of “1:1 full reserve, independent third-party audit.”

This is not just licensing; it’s the entry of a national-level main force with armored vehicles taking over order.

02 Opening the Crack: A Long-Conceived Breakthrough in De-dollarization

If your focus is only on “making retail investors trade coins easily,” then you are underestimating this chess game. Behind it is a financial breakout against US dollar hegemony.

For a long time, the blood (stablecoins) of the crypto world has been monopolized by USDT and USDC. Any Asian capital entering the market must first “take a bath” in the US dollar pool.

This time, Hong Kong is playing a “Hong Kong dollar stablecoin” card.

According to the plan announced by the Monetary Authority, both institutions will initially anchor to the Hong Kong dollar. This is an extremely clever entry point:

1. Compliance channel: It is a value channel regulated by the government, rooted in Asia. The Middle Eastern sovereign funds and mainland RWA assets finally have a settlement tool that does not rely on Wall Street’s face.
2. Coordination with “Document No. 42”: Notably, just two months ago (February 2026), eight mainland departments jointly issued a document to strictly regulate RMB stablecoins and cross-border virtual currency activities. Hong Kong’s relaxation of compliant Hong Kong dollar stablecoins is actually implementing a sophisticated “dual-track system”—internal defense (prevent capital outflows and financial risks) and external breakout (争夺离岸资产定价权).

Data evidence: In 2025, Asia accounted for 60% of global stablecoin payment volume. If Hong Kong does not seize this beachhead, the cake will be taken by Singapore or Switzerland.

03 Three Major Signals Ordinary People Must Beware Of

Every iteration of financial infrastructure is a redistribution of wealth. Facing this reshuffle, I have only three suggestions to help you avoid pitfalls:

Signal 1: Don’t blindly trust “wildcat exchanges” anymore.

When large funds have legitimate, safe channels for inflow and outflow, offshore small platforms relying on high interest and low fees will soon face the “bad money drives out good” effect—liquidity dries up. Protecting principal is more important than anything.

Signal 2: Watch out for “water sellers,” but avoid “air coins.”

After licensing, the real value flow will move to upstream industry chains. HSBC and Standard Chartered have obtained licenses, but they need technology outsourcing, security audits, and cross-border payment solutions.
In the coming months, Hong Kong’s “financial infrastructure” sector and some RWA projects backed by state-owned enterprises may see performance realization. As for those “Hong Kong concept” scam coins, just block them.

Signal 3: Beware of “pig butchering” scams under the guise of “compliance.”

Remember the Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s reminder: services are not officially launched yet. Anyone asking you to buy “internal quotas” now is a scammer. The compliance list is based on the official records on the HKMA website.

04 Conclusion: From “Wild West” to “Wall Street East”

Seeing only 2 approved applicants out of 36, I think of one word: meticulous selection.

HSBC plans to directly push stablecoin payment functions via PayMe and HSBC App in the second half of 2026. This means Hong Kong’s compliant stablecoins are no longer high-up investment products but integrated into daily life as payment tools.

For practitioners, this is indeed a blow because it eliminates information gaps and regulatory arbitrage; but for the entire financial ecosystem, it is an epic upgrade.

When HSBC’s aircraft carrier enters this sea, those still using small boats to ferry people are indeed at the time to withdraw.

Do you think that after HSBC and Standard Chartered’s entry, ordinary people will find it easier to buy compliant digital assets, or will the thresholds become higher? Feel free to leave your opinion in the comments.
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