Hong Kong made a dramatic pivot toward crypto-friendliness in late 2022, with Financial Secretary Paul Chan declaring the city’s intention to become a “virtual asset hub.” This was surprising — Hong Kong had spent years restricting retail crypto access while its regional rival Singapore attracted crypto companies with open arms.
The Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) launched a new licensing framework in June 2023, allowing licensed exchanges to serve retail investors for the first time. HashKey Exchange and OSL became the first licensed platforms, offering Bitcoin and Ethereum trading to Hong Kong residents with full regulatory compliance.
In April 2024, Hong Kong approved spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs — becoming only the second jurisdiction after the US to offer these products. While the Hong Kong ETFs attracted significantly less capital than their US counterparts ($200M vs $50B+), they served as a regulatory proof of concept for the broader Asian market.
The stablecoin regulatory framework, proposed in 2024, required issuers to maintain full reserves, obtain a license, and comply with anti-money laundering rules. This positioned Hong Kong as a safe harbor for regulated stablecoin projects targeting the Asian market, particularly as China’s total crypto ban remained in effect.
The relationship with mainland China remains the elephant in the room. While Hong Kong operates under “one country, two systems,” the crypto policies are watched closely by Beijing. Some interpret Hong Kong’s crypto openness as a Chinese government experiment — testing regulated crypto adoption in a controlled environment without committing at the national level.
Major crypto companies responded to the pivot: Animoca Brands (headquartered in Hong Kong) expanded operations, OKX obtained licensing, and numerous funds set up Hong Kong entities. The city’s existing strengths in finance — deep capital markets, legal infrastructure, talent pool — made the transition natural.
Hong Kong’s approach contrasts with both Dubai’s aggressive courting of crypto companies and Singapore’s recent cooling toward retail crypto. By positioning itself as a regulatory middle ground — stricter than Dubai, more open than Singapore — Hong Kong is carving a unique niche as Asia’s regulated crypto capital.