In yet another powerful reminder of China’s unyielding control over financial tech innovation, two of its technology firms—Alibaba (NYSE:BABA)-affiliated Ant Group and online retail behemoth JD.com—have abruptly suspended their plans to launch stablecoins in Hong Kong. This development, revealed over the weekend, underscores Beijing’s deepening wariness toward private-sector ventures into digital currencies, even in the semi-autonomous city-state.
The pause follows direct interventions from mainland authorities, who view such initiatives as a risky encroachment on state-dominated monetary systems.
Stablecoins, digital assets engineered to mirror the stability of traditional fiat currencies like the U.S. dollar or Hong Kong dollar, have surged in popularity for their role in cryptocurrency trading and cross-border payments.
Hong Kong, eager to cement its status as Asia‘s crypto gateway, rolled out a comprehensive regulatory framework in May 2025. This legislation mandates that issuers of fiat-referenced stablecoins obtain licenses from the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), whether operating locally or abroad.
By August, the HKMA began processing applications, sparking a wave of enthusiasm. Among the 77 interested parties were Ant Group and JD.com, both of whom publicly signaled their intent to join the pilot program earlier in the year.
Ant Group, the fintech born from Alibaba’s payments ecosystem, had eyed the opportunity to expand its global footprint through tokenized products, including potential renminbi-pegged variants.
Similarly, JD.com, a dominant force in e-commerce logistics, sought to leverage stablecoins for cost-efficient international settlements and digital bond issuances.
These moves aligned with Hong Kong’s vision of fostering controlled blockchain experimentation, potentially countering the U.S. dollar’s stranglehold via dollar-denominated tokens like USDC.
Yet, this momentum collided head-on with Beijing’s priorities. According to insiders cited in recent reports, regulators from the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) and the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) issued explicit directives last month, urging the firms to halt progress.
The core apprehension may be related or focused on allowing private entities to mint currency-like instruments could undermine the PBOC’s authority and jeopardize the rollout of China‘s state-backed e-CNY digital yuan, which has faced sluggish adoption despite years of promotion.
The fundamental or core issue boils “down to sovereignty over money creation—whether it belongs to the central bank or market players,” one observer close to the talks remarked.
Officials fear that unchecked private stablecoins might fuel speculation, scams, or even capital flight, echoing broader crackdowns on mainland-linked brokerages’ tokenization of real-world assets in Hong Kong.
This incident isn’t isolated. Just weeks ago, Beijing similarly curbed offshore real-world asset (RWA) experiments, signaling a pattern of caution amid global stablecoin debates.
Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission has amplified warnings about fraud risks in the nascent sector, while former PBOC Governor Zhou Xiaochuan recently questioned the practical value of stablecoins in everyday transactions, arguing they offer minimal efficiency gains over existing payment rails.
For Ant and JD.com, the setback is significant. Both had lobbied for yuan-linked stablecoins in private ecosystems, seeing them as a hedge against dollar dominance—a sentiment echoed by ex-Finance Ministry official Zhu Guangyao in June.
Now, with no licenses issued under the pilot, their international arms must pivot, possibly toward compliant alternatives like e-CNY integrations. Broader implications loom large. Hong Kong‘s stablecoin push, once hailed as a bridge between mainland restraint and global strategy, risks stalling if Beijing’s restrictions tightens further.
Analysts predict the global stablecoin market could balloon to $500 billion to $2 trillion, but in China, innovation bows to control. As one expert noted, the city can’t serve as a “loophole” for evading PRC crypto bans.
This regulatory pivot reaffirms Beijing‘s prevailing narrative and strategy: digital finance thrives only under the party’s watchful eye, prioritizing stability over disruption.