Chinese Tech Giants Halt Stablecoin Launches After Beijing’s Regulatory Intervention
Major firms suspend fiat-linked digital currency plans as Chinese authorities tighten control over private money issuance.
Several of China’s most influential technology companies have paused plans to launch stablecoins following direct intervention by state regulators, underscoring Beijing’s resolve to preserve control over monetary policy and the digital payments landscape.
Firms including Ant Group and JD.com had been preparing to issue fiat-referenced digital tokens in Hong Kong under a new licensing framework approved earlier this year.
Those plans have now been shelved after regulators including the People’s Bank of China and the Cyberspace Administration of China warned that private currency issuance could undermine state authority and complicate financial oversight.
The move comes despite Hong Kong’s passage of a licensing regime for stablecoin issuers in May 2025, designed to provide legal clarity and encourage innovation.
Mainland authorities, however, remain wary that privately issued stablecoins — particularly those linked to foreign currencies such as the U.S. dollar — could enable capital flight, fuel illicit flows, and weaken Beijing’s ability to manage cross-border financial activity.
Sources familiar with the discussions said regulators had made clear that no digital asset functioning as a currency substitute would be tolerated without strict state supervision.
The suspension also reflects a broader strategic priority: China is continuing to develop its own central bank digital currency, the e-CNY, as part of a long-term effort to strengthen monetary sovereignty and reduce reliance on foreign payment systems.
Officials are increasingly concerned that dollar-pegged stablecoins are dominating global trade settlements, and that Chinese exporters are increasingly relying on them to bypass traditional banking channels.
For technology firms, stablecoins had offered the potential for lucrative new revenue streams through transaction fees and reserve earnings, as well as a foothold in the rapidly growing global digital payments ecosystem.
However, the government’s intervention makes clear that innovation in this space will proceed only under close state direction.
Industry analysts say companies may now redirect their focus toward tokenized financial products or e-CNY-based payment solutions, aligning their digital finance ambitions more closely with national policy priorities.
The decision sends a strong signal to both domestic and international markets: China will remain at the forefront of digital currency development, but the evolution of this technology will occur firmly under the state’s leadership and within the boundaries of its monetary strategy.