Two major recent developments have completely shattered the calm of the stablecoin market.
Let’s start with the mainland. Thirteen departments unusually sat down together for a meeting, sending a very clear signal: all virtual currency-related activities are classified as illegal financial activities, and any use of stablecoins for money laundering or asset transfers will be severely cracked down on. This isn’t just a warning—it’s a concrete “clean-up” operation, with the goal of paving the way for the digital RMB.
Now looking at Hong Kong, they’re taking a completely different route. They have no plans to ban stablecoins, but have instead designed an extremely strict licensing regime. The Deputy CEO of the HKMA put it bluntly: “The threshold is very high.” Even entering the sandbox testing doesn’t guarantee a full license. The implication? They want to take market control away from giants like Tether and hand it over to qualified, licensed institutions. Application scenarios are also limited: professional investors, cross-border trade settlement, and other real-economy use cases. Hong Kong aims to build an “elite club”-style financial experimental zone.
What impact will these two approaches have on the market?
There will be fundamental shifts in capital flows. Mainland USDT trading channels now carry much higher risks—participants will either exit and wait, or turn to relatively transparent alternatives like USDC. The industry landscape will be completely reshaped—when the largest stablecoin faces restrictions in both core markets at the same time, the era of wild expansion based on scale and speed is over. From now on, compliance capabilities will be the key to survival for projects.
There’s another point worth watching: can Hong Kong’s sandbox experiment succeed? If it truly becomes a legitimate gateway for traditional capital to enter the crypto world, the implications would be huge.
The situation is now clear—the rules have been rewritten. Some see approaching risks, while others see new opportunities in the wave of compliance. Who do you think is most likely to come out on top in this regulator-driven reshuffle?
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
17 Likes
Reward
17
4
1
Share
Comment
0/400
AirdropHarvester
· 5h ago
Damn, the mainland is really clearing the field this time. USDT might actually be done for.
Hong Kong is playing this move brilliantly, raising the stakes in a sandbox—compliance is the new elite.
Let’s see if USDC can step up, this is its chance.
Mass capital exodus; only those who comply will survive.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidityOracle
· 6h ago
The mainland is clearing the field directly, while Hong Kong is creating elite clubs... Are they forcing us to all in on USDC?
View OriginalReply0
ForkMonger
· 6h ago
mainland's just nuking the whole stablecoin thesis lol. usdt holders bout to learn what "governance attack vectors" really means when liquidity dries up overnight. hong kong playing 4d chess tho—licensing regime is just a smokescreen for capital control, not innovation. who wins? whoever forks first when the sandboxed experiment inevitably collapses under its own bureaucratic weight.
Reply0
LayerZeroEnjoyer
· 6h ago
This wave in the mainland is a complete purge, USDT is probably going to take a big hit.
Hong Kong, on the other hand, has given a way out, but with such high entry barriers, can anyone really get in?
Now USDC is about to take off, compliance is the real hard currency.
Two different approaches between China and the US, it's really hard to say which path will work out.
With regulation coming in, it's actually an opportunity for big institutions, while retail investors get cut again.
Two major recent developments have completely shattered the calm of the stablecoin market.
Let’s start with the mainland. Thirteen departments unusually sat down together for a meeting, sending a very clear signal: all virtual currency-related activities are classified as illegal financial activities, and any use of stablecoins for money laundering or asset transfers will be severely cracked down on. This isn’t just a warning—it’s a concrete “clean-up” operation, with the goal of paving the way for the digital RMB.
Now looking at Hong Kong, they’re taking a completely different route. They have no plans to ban stablecoins, but have instead designed an extremely strict licensing regime. The Deputy CEO of the HKMA put it bluntly: “The threshold is very high.” Even entering the sandbox testing doesn’t guarantee a full license. The implication? They want to take market control away from giants like Tether and hand it over to qualified, licensed institutions. Application scenarios are also limited: professional investors, cross-border trade settlement, and other real-economy use cases. Hong Kong aims to build an “elite club”-style financial experimental zone.
What impact will these two approaches have on the market?
There will be fundamental shifts in capital flows. Mainland USDT trading channels now carry much higher risks—participants will either exit and wait, or turn to relatively transparent alternatives like USDC. The industry landscape will be completely reshaped—when the largest stablecoin faces restrictions in both core markets at the same time, the era of wild expansion based on scale and speed is over. From now on, compliance capabilities will be the key to survival for projects.
There’s another point worth watching: can Hong Kong’s sandbox experiment succeed? If it truly becomes a legitimate gateway for traditional capital to enter the crypto world, the implications would be huge.
The situation is now clear—the rules have been rewritten. Some see approaching risks, while others see new opportunities in the wave of compliance. Who do you think is most likely to come out on top in this regulator-driven reshuffle?