In 2021, Coinbase listed on Nasdaq, its market capitalization once exceeding $85 billion, marking a significant event in the traditional capital market's acceptance of the crypto world. Three years later, on the other side of the ocean, HashKey, an Asian compliant digital asset platform, officially submitted its listing application to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. As the bells of Wall Street and the gongs of Victoria Harbour face each other across the sea, an East-West dialogue about the future of digital finance is unfolding.
Essentially, HashKey and Coinbase play the same role: both are key bridges connecting the traditional financial world with the new crypto world. They have both chosen the seemingly most difficult yet most sustainable path—compliant operation.
Coinbase spent eight years working with US regulators before finally gaining mainstream recognition; HashKey, on the other hand, incorporated compliance into its DNA from the outset, obtaining comprehensive licenses in multiple jurisdictions including Hong Kong, Singapore, and Bermuda. They both understand one principle: in the highly regulated field of finance, compliance is not a limitation, but a passport to mainstream acceptance. While many platforms are still operating in a gray area, these two companies have already built safe and compliant entry channels for institutional funds.
The prospectus shows that HashKey's platform assets are close to HK$20 billion, with institutional clients dominating. This is remarkably similar to Coinbase's early development path—first winning the trust of the most cautious institutional investors, and then expanding into a broader market. They both address the same core issue: how to allow capital from the traditional world to safely and legally enter the crypto world.
HashKey's IPO push coincided with the harvest period of Hong Kong's virtual asset policies. This was no accident, but an inevitability—the maturity of the company and the maturity of the market occurred simultaneously, jointly completing a solemn "coming-of-age ceremony."
Over the past few years, Hong Kong's regulatory framework for virtual assets has evolved from nothing to something, from exploration to maturity. The release of the "Policy Declaration on the Development of Virtual Assets" in 2022 and the formal implementation of the licensing system in 2023 have laid a clear regulatory foundation for the market. HashKey is a benchmark company that has grown up in this regulatory environment.
Unlike the US market where Coinbase operates, Hong Kong follows a "rules-first" approach. In the US, innovation often precedes regulation; in Hong Kong, the regulatory framework is established first, then the market is guided to innovate within those rules. Both models have their advantages and disadvantages, but they both aim at the same goal: to unleash innovation while keeping risks under control.
HashKey's business strategy also reflects its innovative exploration within this regulatory framework. From trading to custody, from staking services to asset management, and then to its self-developed HashKey Chain, it is building a complete digital asset ecosystem. This is not only a commercial expansion, but also a comprehensive validation of Hong Kong's virtual asset service capabilities.
Looking back at the development of the crypto industry, we have witnessed a transformation from a chaotic state to an orderly one. Coinbase's IPO proved that crypto companies can meet the scale requirements of traditional capital markets, while HashKey's IPO process demonstrates that world-class digital asset platforms can also be cultivated in the financial center of the East.
Hong Kong's unique advantages lie in its geographical location, backed by mainland China and facing the world, as well as its deep-rooted rule of law and international financial experience. As global capital seeks entry into the Asian crypto market, Hong Kong offers a solution that combines international standards with a Chinese understanding.
If HashKey successfully goes public, its significance will extend beyond the capitalization process of a single company. It will demonstrate to the world that there is another path to success beyond the Western-dominated crypto narrative—a path that combines Eastern regulatory wisdom with global financial innovation.
The capital market journeys of the two major crypto trading platforms in the East and West, seemingly parallel, are in fact interconnected. They jointly demonstrate a trend: crypto finance is moving from the periphery to the center, from unregulated growth to standardization. As Coinbase proves its scale on Nasdaq and HashKey validates its path on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, we are witnessing a global industry blossoming in different market environments, each with its own distinct yet shared origin.
Hong Kong's crypto story may have only just begun. But this chapter already outlines the self-renewal of an international financial center in the digital age. As tradition and modernity converge, and as Eastern wisdom and global innovation collide, Hong Kong is quietly completing its crucial leap from an international financial center to an international digital financial center.


