Hong Kong Crypto Ecosystem 2.0: Stablecoins, RWA, and the New Battleground for Financial Institutions
Author: Hu Tao, ChainCatcher
Waking up early and catching a late bus might be the most fitting description of Hong Kong's development history in the crypto industry.
In the early stages of the crypto industry, a series of companies that would later have a profound impact were born here, including the current stablecoin giant usdt-257">Tether, the once-leading exchange FTX, the derivatives exchange BitMEX, and the well-known exchange Crypto.com. During that period, Hong Kong seemed to become one of the most important bases for crypto entrepreneurship globally.
However, it is lamentable that this once-thriving crypto entrepreneurship center gradually lost its leading position in the industry over the following years. With changes in Hong Kong's international regulatory environment, many crypto companies, including Tether and FTX, left Hong Kong around 2021, opting to develop in places like Singapore, Dubai, and the Bahamas. For a long time, Hong Kong missed out on the most fervent growth dividends of the crypto market.
Nevertheless, as the industry enters a new cycle, Hong Kong has once again appeared on the core stage of the crypto market.
In the past two years, from the implementation of the exchange licensing system to the advancement of the stablecoin regulatory framework, and the hosting of a series of large industry events, Hong Kong is re-attracting funds, talent, and companies, gradually forming a new crypto industry structure.
Missing the First Wave
In the early stages of the crypto industry, Hong Kong was almost one of the most important entrepreneurial cities in the world.
At that time, a large number of crypto companies chose to establish their headquarters here for a simple reason: Hong Kong has a mature financial system, an international legal environment, and a relatively open capital flow mechanism. These conditions made it an important node connecting Asia and global markets, especially the Chinese-speaking market.
However, this advantage did not last long. As the global regulatory environment tightened, Hong Kong adopted a relatively cautious regulatory strategy in the virtual asset sector. After 2018, the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission gradually established a licensing system for virtual asset trading platforms, imposing strict compliance requirements on exchanges, including investor restrictions, fund custody, and operational norms.
From the perspective of an industry still in a state of wild growth at that time, the threshold of this system was too high and would limit access for overseas users. Over five years, only 10 local small and medium-sized exchanges with traditional financial backgrounds obtained exchange licenses. Many large cryptocurrency exchanges chose to leave Hong Kong for jurisdictions with looser regulations.
In 2021, FTX moved its headquarters to the Bahamas, while some trading platforms shifted to Singapore or Dubai. With the departure of these companies, Hong Kong gradually transformed from one of the core cities for crypto entrepreneurship into a relatively marginal participant.
The local track in Hong Kong also failed to form support. Animoca Brands became the most representative crypto company in Hong Kong based on NFTs and GameFi, once regarded as Hong Kong's Web3 business card, and established a vast ecosystem covering hundreds of projects through investment and incubation. However, as NFT trading volumes collapsed, GameFi economic models failed, and the financing market cooled, Animoca's growth logic quickly weakened, and its IPO has yet to materialize, significantly diminishing its market influence.
Additionally, the shutdown or exit of Babel Finance, BitCoke, and JPEX also had a negative impact on Hong Kong's local crypto ecosystem and market education, leading regulatory authorities to further tighten relevant regulatory policies.
As the industry's core infrastructure and interest communities underwent global restructuring, Hong Kong remained in a state of "regulatory observation - tightening - readjustment."
New Regulations and Turning Points
The turning point occurred in 2025. In May, Hong Kong passed the "Stablecoin Ordinance" which officially took effect on August 1, aiming to establish a licensing system for fiat-backed stablecoin issuers. The ordinance requires that issuers of stablecoins claiming to be pegged to the Hong Kong dollar must be licensed, emphasizing sufficient asset reserves, customer asset segregation, and prohibition of interest payments.
In June, the Hong Kong government released the "Hong Kong Digital Asset Development Policy Declaration 2.0," expressing its firm commitment to building Hong Kong into a global leading digital asset center, which also involved specific regulatory agencies, exploration directions, and support policies, greatly boosting the confidence of practitioners in the digital asset field.
At the same time, Hong Kong's main competitor, Singapore, released new DTSP regulations in May 2025, requiring all crypto service providers to be licensed by the end of June, with a policy direction of "very few licenses" leading to the migration of many companies. The "LEAP" strategic framework launched by Hong Kong at this time—legal regulatory optimization, tokenized product expansion, application scenario promotion, and talent cooperation development—complemented these policies, attracting global crypto resources to converge in Hong Kong.
The crypto market trends and conditions further stimulated the entry of global forces. On one hand, btc-42">Bitcoin prices continued to rise in 2025, reaching new highs in October; on the other hand, the explosive popularity of concepts like RWA and DAT also prompted major global financial and tech companies like BlackRock and Visa to enter the market, providing a favorable external environment for Hong Kong to vigorously promote the development of the crypto industry.
Today, the main players in Hong Kong's crypto market are no longer broad hot projects but rather a cluster of local compliant enterprises focused on crypto asset management, stablecoins, and payment sectors.
In the exchange sector, Hashkey Group successfully completed a $200 million IPO and has become one of the most influential crypto companies in the Asian market by covering various aspects such as trading, asset management, Layer 2, and VC. In the payment sector, RedotPay has completed several hundred million dollars in financing and has become the biggest dark horse in the crypto payment field through aggressive strategies in emerging regions. Companies like Avenir Group, First Digital, and Hex Trust have also established solid market competitiveness.
In February 2026, eight ministries and commissions from the mainland jointly issued Document No. 42, clearly prohibiting all RWA tokenization-related activities within the country, while simultaneously opening a compliant channel for overseas RWA, allowing domestic entities to conduct RWA business abroad under regulatory conditions. The document also stated that overseas branches of domestic financial institutions (branches, offices, etc.) could engage in tokenization-related businesses, provided they comply with local laws and Chinese regulatory requirements, fulfilling legal obligations such as high prudence and anti-money laundering.
Considering that most overseas branches of Chinese financial institutions are primarily based in Hong Kong, this regulation further solidifies Hong Kong's position as a bridgehead in the Chinese-speaking market, making it a key hub connecting mainland regulations with global markets.
For the Chinese-speaking crypto market, Hong Kong's value is irreplaceable. It serves as both a "compliance springboard" for mainland crypto talent going abroad and a "conversion interface" for global capital entering the Chinese-speaking market. Leveraging its status as an international financial center, it connects compliant crypto assets with global institutional investors. This bidirectional hub role places Hong Kong in a unique "middle ground" in the global crypto industry, distinct from the dominant ecosystem of the U.S. and the grassroots innovation of Southeast Asia, forming a differentiated advantage centered on "compliance, connection, and pragmatism."
In a sense, Hong Kong is becoming an "offshore testing ground" for China's crypto industry. This positioning not only meets the development needs of the global digital asset industry but also aligns with the core logic of mainland regulation to some extent. It is this subtle balance that has allowed Hong Kong to regain a unique position in the global crypto regulatory competition.
Conclusion
The decade of Hong Kong's crypto market has been a tale of "missing" and "grasping" opportunities. Initially, due to a mismatch between regulatory pace and industry development, it missed the wild growth wave; however, as the industry entered the compliance era, Hong Kong took proactive steps to align with the rhythm, showcasing its firm confidence in the crypto industry through a clear regulatory framework, unique geopolitical advantages, and a solid industrial ecosystem.
If early Hong Kong was a gathering place for crypto entrepreneurs, today’s Hong Kong resembles the embryonic form of a digital asset financial center. After gradually forming institutional advantages in areas like stablecoin regulation, asset tokenization, and cross-border payments, this city may be welcoming its second opportunity.
This time, Hong Kong is no longer just a bystander in the crypto industry but may become the core hub of the compliant crypto market in the Chinese-speaking world and even the entire Asia-Pacific region.
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