Hong Kong consultation on regulatory regime for stablecoin issuers

Rossana Chu • 18 April 2024
Rossana Chu

Partner, Hong Kong


Download PDF

Hong Kong consultation on regulatory regime for stablecoin issuers

The Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau of the Hong Kong government and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) conducted public consultations in December 2023 on a proposed regulatory regime for stablecoin activities in Hong Kong that would be effected by new legislation.


Scope of proposed regime


The proposed regime covers any fiat-referenced stablecoin (FRS), which is defined as a cryptographically secured digital representation of value that purports, among its features, to maintain a stable value with reference to one or more fiat currencies, except for items already covered by other regulatory regimes, such as deposits. This definition also excludes stablecoins that are referenced to precious metals or other assets.

The two types of activities to be regulated are:

  1. FRS issuance, including: (i) issuing an FRS in Hong Kong; (ii) issuing an FRS with reference to the value of the Hong Kong dollar (regardless of whether the issuance is in Hong Kong); and (iii) active marketing of an FRS issuance to the Hong Kong public; and
  2. FRS offering, including: (i) offering an FRS in Hong Kong; and (ii) active marketing of the offering to the Hong Kong public.


Engaging in such regulated activities without the relevant licence or authorisation will constitute a criminal offence. The HKMA will administer the proposed FRS-issuer licensing and regulatory regime.


FRS issuance


It is proposed that all FRS issuers be licensed by the HKMA. The licensing requirements would include:

  • The value of the reserve assets backing the FRS must be always at least equal to the par value of the FRS in circulation. Issuers that derive FRS value from arbitrage or algorithm will not be granted licences.
  • The reserve assets (normally in the referenced currency) must be of high quality and high liquidity, with minimal market, credit and concentration risks.
  • An effective trust arrangement is required such that the reserve assets of the FRS are segregated from the issuer’s other assets, put in segregated accounts maintained with licensed banks in Hong Kong, or placed under other custodial arrangements approved by the HKMA, and are available to satisfy FRS redemptions.
  • The FRS issuer must have adequate policies, guidelines and controls for managing all investment activities of the reserve assets to ensure funds are available to satisfy redemption requests.
  • Any income for or loss from the reserve assets (e.g. interest payments, dividends or capital gains or losses) must be attributed to FRS issuers, but FRS issuers must not pay interest to FRS holders.
  • An FRS issuer must be a company incorporated in Hong Kong. Its chief executive, senior management team and key personnel must be based in Hong Kong and exercise effective management and control of the company’s FRS issuance and related activities.
  • An FRS issuer’s minimum paid-up share capital is either HKD25 million (USD3.2 million) or 2% of the par value of FRSs in circulation, whichever is higher. The HKMA may impose a higher level of paid-up share capital requirement.
  • FRS holders should have the right to redeem their FRS at par value in the relevant currency referenced by the FRS on a timely basis, without having to pay undue costs and without being subject to unreasonable redemption conditions (e.g. a very high minimum threshold amount).
  • Appropriate risk management processes and measures must be in place, e.g. adequate security and internal controls to safeguard the integrity of data and systems, effective fraud monitoring and detection measures, technology risk-management measures, and robust contingency arrangements to address operational disruptions.
  • Adequate and appropriate systems of control must be in place to prevent and combat possible money laundering and terrorism financing.
  • The FRS issuer must seek the HKMA’s approval before commencing any new line of business. In any event, it should not carry on lending and financial intermediation, or conduct other Hong Kong regulated activities.
  • It must publish a white paper to disclose general information about itself, FRS holders’ rights and obligations, a stabilisation mechanism, reserves management arrangements, the underlying technology, risks and redemption policies and processes.
  • The total amount of the FRS in circulation, the mark-to-market value of reserve assets and the composition of reserve assets must be disclosed regularly to the public.
  • The FRS issuer must submit audited financial statements to the HKMA annually.


FRS offering


FRS can be offered in Hong Kong only by licensed FRS issuers and other regulated entities, such as licensed corporations regulated by the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission, authorised institutions licensed by the HKMA, and licensed virtual asset trading platforms. Where the FRS is not issued by a licensed FRS issuer, the offering can be made only to professional investors.


Features of regulatory regime


This regime proposed by the Hong Kong regulators will provide adequate protection to FRS holders and address potential monetary and financial stability risks posed by FRSs. Certain locality elements are proposed (e.g. the FRS issuer must be a Hong Kong company with locally based senior management) to allow the HKMA to exercise effective supervision over such entities and persons. To protect the Hong Kong public, it fences Hong Kong retail investors off from being offered FRSs not issued by licensed FRS issuers.


This may be onerous to certain international FRS issuers, but it is an important step for Hong Kong to maintain its status as an international financial centre while developing a healthy stablecoin ecosystem at the same time.

YYC Legal LLP is in Association with East & Concord Partners (Hong Kong) Law Firm.

This material has been prepared for general informational purposes only and is not intended to be relied upon as professional advice. Please contact us for specific advice.

Recent articles

by Sam Wu 6 June 2025
On 18 December 2024, the Stablecoins Bill was introduced into the Legislative Council of Hong Kong for the first reading, and is expected to be operational in the coming months. The successful implementation of the Stablecoins Bill could pave the way for a more robust and secure digital currency landscape in Hong Kong and beyond.
by Rossana Chu, Beverly Fu 22 May 2025
The Hong Kong Government announced that the law to enable non-Hong Kong companies to re-domicile to Hong Kong will take effect on 23 May 2025.
by Rossana Chu, Sam Wu 9 May 2025
The New Capital Investment Entrant Scheme was launched in March 2024 to attract high-net-worth individuals and business elites to relocate to Hong Kong by making capital investments. To further the objective of the New CIES, various enhancement measures have been introduced to take effect from 1 March 2025
by Rossana Chu, Dennis Yeung 28 March 2025
HKEX enhanced requirements on board effectiveness, gender diversity, risk management and dividend policy are introduced to the 2,600 Hong Kong-listed companies, together with relevant additional disclosure obligations.
by Rossana Chu 21 March 2025
The Companies Ordinance (Chapter 622 of the Laws of Hong Kong) has been amended to introduce an “implied consent mechanism” for both listed and unlisted Hong Kong incorporated companies to disseminate corporate communication by electronic means. The new mechanism will come into effect on 17 April 2025.
by Rossana Chu 14 March 2025
The introduction of the treasury share regime to the Companies Ordinance brings Hong Kong on a par with Cayman Islands and Bermuda. Accordingly, a Hong Kong incorporated listed company will no longer be required to cancel bought-back shares.
More articles

Recent News

30 May 2025
We are delighted to announce that YYC Legal LLP has been named by Global Law Experts as the “M&A Law Firm of the Year in Hong Kong – 2025”.
26 May 2025
We are delighted to announce that YYC Legal LLP has been named by In-House Community as the “Corporate and M&A Law Firm of the Year, 2024 – Hong Kong”.
25 April 2025
We are pleased to announce that YYC Legal LLP was awarded, by the China Business Law Journal, the “Deals of the Year 2024 – M&A”.
by YYC Legal LLP 1 April 2025
YYC Legal announces the joining of Philip Ng as a new Consultant.
by YYC Legal 17 January 2025
YYC Legal is recognised as a Leading Firm and our partner Rossana Chu is named as a Leading Individual in Chambers Greater China Region Guide 2025.
by YYC Legal 18 December 2024
Rossana Chu is ranked by China Business Law Journal as one of The A-List 2024-25: Visionaries (International) and is recognised as amongst the most highly recommended lawyers in the market.
More News