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Over 20 crypto firms plan to establish presence in the city: Hong Kong authorities

Hong Kong’s Secretary for Monetary Providers and the Treasury Christopher Hui stated that over 80 digital asset-related companies had expressed curiosity in establishing their presence within the metropolis as of the top of February.

Hui added that 23 crypto companies have already indicated they “plan to ascertain their presence in Hong Kong.”

In a March 20 speech, Hui stated these companies included blockchain infrastructure firms, blockchain community safety firms, digital forex wallets, cost firms, and different tasks constructing on the web3 ecosystem.

In line with Hui, this wave of curiosity is approaching the again of the federal government’s launch of its coverage assertion on Digital Asset Growth. He added that town already has a vibrant fintech ecosystem with greater than 800 firms offering monetary companies for public and enterprise sector members.

Hong Kong continues regulatory drive

Hui stated the Hong Kong authorities was not resting on its laurels as it’s at present engaged on establishing a licensing regime for digital asset service suppliers by June 2023.

Hui added that town expects its licensing regime to draw “extra high quality VA enterprises to arrange companies in Hong Kong or to hunt growth alternatives in Hong Kong.”

Apart from the licensing regime, the federal government can be engaged on a complete regulatory regime for stablecoins. The town goals to implement these rules by 2024.

Hong Kong eyes personal CBDC, testing digital Renminbi for cross-border funds

Hui famous that town was collaborating with Mainland China to check using digital Renminbi (Digital Yuan) in making cross-boundary funds.

In line with Hui, town additionally labored with a number of central banks of various crosses on a number of central financial institution digital forex (CBDC) bridge tasks to expedite cross-border funds. He added:

“We’re additionally trying into the problems pertinent to potential issuance of e-Hong Kong greenback.”