Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post reported in March that HSBC and a joint venture between Standard Chartered and Animoca were expected to be some of the first recipients of stablecoin licenses.

HSBC and Standard Chartered are two of the city’s note-issuing banks, a status that ties them directly to the Hong Kong dollar’s issuance framework and underscores how closely the stablecoin regime is being linked to existing monetary infrastructure.

This system that dates back to 1846, when private banks began issuing currency backed by silver deposits in the absence of a colonial central bank.

Today, each note-issuing bank deposits U.S. dollars with the government’s Exchange Fund at the fixed rate of HK$7.80 per dollar and receives Certificates of Indebtedness in return, against which it prints banknotes.

HKMA Chief Executive Eddie Yue drew the parallel in a December 2023 blog post.

Pre-1935 banknotes issued by commercial banks in exchange for deposited silver were a form of “private money,” Yue wrote, and stablecoins function as their blockchain-based equivalent — tokens with stable value that can serve as a medium of exchange on-chain.

An HKMA spokesperson would not give a reason for the delay.

“The HKMA is actively taking forward the licensing matter and will announce further details in due course,” a spokesperson told CoinDesk.

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