HKMA Eddie Yue Discusses Hong Kongs Role In Shaping The Future Of CBDCs

Eddie Yue, Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), shared his thoughts on the future of money and payment systems in an increasingly digital world at the International Conference on Central Bank Digital Currencies and Payment Systems.

The monetary authority has been researching central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) in Hong Kong since 2017 and is working on one of the most advanced explorations of a multi-CBDC platform globally.

Eddie YueHong Kong CBDCs

Eddie Yue

Eddie discussed the potential of tokenisation, a process of transforming the rights to an asset into a digital token, to enable the interweaving of money and assets in both the physical and digital world.

“The HKMA has been working with the industry to explore potential applications for an e-HKD, a new form of digital money, and has launched the second phase of the e-HKD Pilot Programme,”

said Eddie.

The monetary authority envisions a future monetary system where public and private money coexists, with CBDCs as a trusted monetary anchor. To achieve this, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority is developing a digital money framework comprising three key components: retail CBDCs, regulated stablecoins, and tokenised deposits.

While a retail CBDC may represent a more advanced version of cash, the HKMA will continue to consider its introduction using a use-case-driven approach.

The monetary authority has also recently completed a consultation on a legislative proposal to implement a regulatory regime for stablecoin issuers, ensuring adequate protection for stablecoin holders.

The HKMA is also exploring the potential of a wholesale CBDC, which could underpin different forms of digital money and support the growing tokenisation market.

The development of a wholesale CBDC sandbox, Project Ensemble, aims to explore the technical viability of interbank settlement functionality between institutions with their ledgers and systems for tokenised assets.

Eddie emphasised the importance of public-private collaboration among the Government, industry, and academia in navigating these projects’ implications for legal, regulatory, policy, financial stability, privacy, and cybersecurity issues.

Featured image credit: Edited from Freepik

RECENT NEWS

XTransfer Partners With Bank SinoPac HK To Expand Cross-Border Payment Services

XTransfer has entered into a collaboration with Bank SinoPac, through its Hong Kong Branch, to expand international ope... Read more

Standard Chartered To Launch Bitcoin And Ethereum Custody Services By 2026

Standard Chartered Bank (Hong Kong) participated in Hong Kong Fintech Week 2025 (HKFTW25) as a strategic partner, annou... Read more

HashKey And Kraken Form Partnership On Institutional Tokenised Assets

HashKey and Kraken have announced a strategic partnership to promote institutional adoption of tokenised assets. The co... Read more

Reap Expands Global HQ With New Office In Hong Kong

Reap, a global fintech company providing stablecoin-enabled financial infrastructure, has expanded its global headquart... Read more

HeyMax Debuts In Hong Kong, Partnering With Cathay To Drive Regional Growth

Loyalty and travel rewards platform HeyMax has made its first international launch in Hong Kong, partnering with Cath... Read more