
Stablecoins won over users by making money easier to move, long before the financial world agreed on what they meant. That helps explain the scale of USDT and USDC: they never had to replace the global reserve system to become powerful.
They simply made dollars easier to move online, and crypto markets made the network effect impossible to ignore.
On July 7, 2026, Beijing and Hong Kong unveiled a group of measures designed to strengthen Hong Kong’s role in offshore yuan finance.
Hong Kong began trial operations of a central gold clearing and settlement system, revived US dollar-denominated gold futures, and said it was exploring yuan-denominated gold futures.
Authorities also expanded the HKMA’s yuan business facility to 500 billion yuan and raised the annual Southbound Bond Connect investment quota to 800 billion yuan.
Taken item by item, that looks like a niche update for bond traders and central-bank watchers. But read together, it points to a much larger change in the city’s financial ecosystem.
Hong Kong is being positioned as the place where yuan funding, gold settlement, and access to Chinese capital markets become easier for institutions to use.
The stablecoin market still runs overwhelmingly on digital dollars, but Hong Kong’s package could make yuan funding and gold settlement more usable for institutions seeking non-dollar routes.
Hong Kong is trying to become a more efficient hub for non-dollar activity, especially activity tied to the yuan and to reserve assets global investors already understand. Once the subject is framed that way, the package looks much more consequential than another update on yuan internationalization.
Hong Kong is becoming China’s offshore laboratory
To fully explain the package and its importance, we first need to separate it into the different functions it serves.
Gold is the easiest place to begin. Hong Kong began trial operations of a central gold clearing and settlement system and aims to expand the city’s total storage capacity to more than 2,000 metric tons within three years. Those steps could give the city a larger role in trading, settling, and storing gold at scale.
Gold is one of the most important pillars of global finance because it offers a reserve asset with broad recognition and deep historical legitimacy. While governments, banks, and large investors may disagree on currencies, they have no problem understanding gold.
The HKMA increased its RMB Business Facility for Hong Kong banks from 200 billion yuan to 500 billion yuan (approximately $73.6 billion), with the expansion taking effect on July 10.
That expansion will give banks in Hong Kong access to deeper offshore yuan funding. In practical terms, it will make yuan-based activity outside mainland China easier to fund and easier to scale. A currency extends its reach when financial institutions can consistently access it, price it confidently, and use it in larger transactions without encountering funding bottlenecks.
Bond Connect serves the capital-markets side of the same strategy. The larger southbound quota allows mainland investors to buy more offshore bonds through Hong Kong, widening the city’s role as a bridge between Chinese capital and global markets.
A larger bridge means more use, more intermediaries, and more reasons for institutions to treat Hong Kong as a serious offshore yuan center.
These moves give institutions more ways to operate outside the dollar system, from clearing and storing gold to funding yuan transactions and accessing offshore bonds at scale. That’s the kind of practical advantage that helped dollar stablecoins dominate crypto in the first place, as users followed the route that felt easiest and most liquid.
The market often treats stablecoins as a race among issuers such as Tether and Circle, but that captures only one layer of competition and misses all of the others.
The deeper contest is about which monetary route will become easiest for people and institutions to use. Stablecoins offered a powerful alternative to the dollar, and Beijing is now trying to establish easier access to assets that sit outside the dollar system.
China wants the yuan used more widely abroad, yet its capital controls keep sending traders and savers toward Bitcoin and dollar stablecoins when they need money that can move freely.
Hong Kong offers a partial solution because it gives China an offshore venue where it can deepen yuan use, expand market access, and attract global participation while preserving firmer control over the mainland system.
Gold gives the yuan a broader appeal
Gold gives Hong Kong’s plan an extra source of appeal. By building a larger gold market alongside wider yuan use, the city could draw institutions seeking both access to China’s currency and a reserve asset beyond it.
If Hong Kong succeeds in becoming a larger gold hub, the city could gain credibility as a platform for non-dollar reserve activity beyond its role as a channel for Chinese financial policy.
That helps explain why this development affects stablecoins. Stablecoins made the dollar programmable and portable. Now Hong Kong is trying to make yuan funding, access to Chinese bonds, and gold settlement more usable for institutions seeking alternatives within the traditional financial system.
Both aim to make cross-border finance easier, though they use different tools and serve different goals. Dollar stablecoins move dollars across digital networks, while Hong Kong’s package builds traditional market infrastructure for yuan funding, bonds, and gold settlement.
However, China won’t have an easy road to yuan adoption.
The yuan remains a managed currency, which gives Beijing a high degree of domestic control it clearly values but limits how naturally the yuan can spread through global markets.
Dollar stablecoins benefit from the scale, liquidity, and broad confidence in dollar pricing. While Hong Kong can certainly make offshore yuan activity more attractive, it can’t erase the structural cost of capital controls simply by expanding a clearing system or raising a quota.
Hong Kong allows China to invite more global participation around the edges of its system while keeping the mainland core under tighter supervision.
In that sense, Hong Kong functions as China’s offshore laboratory for financial openness. It offers enough flexibility to attract capital and enough oversight to keep the experiment within limits Beijing can accept.
The next stage of the crypto race will be about which monetary routes become easiest to use across borders.
Right now, crypto still primarily meets that need with digital dollars. Hong Kong’s latest package shows China building a different route, one centered on offshore yuan liquidity, bond market access, and gold’s enduring role as a reserve asset.
That route still faces obvious limits. The world’s financial system is being rebuilt through a mix of software, market access, reserve assets, and political control.
Dollar stablecoins remain the clearest expression of that shift inside crypto, but Hong Kong’s yuan-and-gold package shows that China intends to shape the same transition from another angle, one institutional upgrade at a time.
The post Hong Kong builds a gold and yuan network that sidesteps dollar stablecoins appeared first on CryptoSlate.
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