I needed some time wrap my head around the 2026-27  Hong Kong Budget, and I’m glad I did. If there’s one thing that’s being signalled out, it’s that Hong Kong isI needed some time wrap my head around the 2026-27  Hong Kong Budget, and I’m glad I did. If there’s one thing that’s being signalled out, it’s that Hong Kong is

Hong Kong Dropped Its Most Ambitious Digital Asset Budget Yet

2026/03/02 10:59
6 min read

I needed some time wrap my head around the 2026-27  Hong Kong Budget, and I’m glad I did. If there’s one thing that’s being signalled out, it’s that Hong Kong is institutionalising the digital asset ecosystem as a core pillar of its future financial architecture.

When Financial Secretary Paul Chan delivered the Budget on 25 February 2026, he revealed a detailed stack, comprising a new tokenisation settlement platform, an upgraded wholesale CBDC infrastructure, crypto tax transparency rules, and more, with timelines in place.

The SFC Gets a Digital Asset Accelerator

As long as strong protections for investors are in place, Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) plans to make it easier to buy and sell digital assets in the city, and allow professional investors access to a wider range of crypto-related products and services.

The SFC will also create a dedicated accelerator to help new financial innovations move through the approval process faster.

By improving market liquidity, Hong Kong could attract more institutional players and capital into its crypto market. Expanding product offerings for professional investors suggests we may see more sophisticated instruments emerge.

The accelerator could shorten the time it takes for fintech and crypto firms to get new ideas off the ground and into the market.

Hong Kong Opens the Door to Regulated Stablecoins in March

Hong Kong has introduced a formal licensing system for companies that issue stablecoins, digital currencies pegged to traditional currencies like the US dollar or the Hong Kong dollar. The first licences under this new framework are set to be granted next month.

The government, along with financial regulators, will continue supporting these licensed issuers as they explore real-world use cases, as long as they operate within the rules and manage risks responsibly.

For Hong Kong, this is a significant step. Becoming one of the few jurisdictions with a clear, regulated pathway for stablecoin issuers could draw major crypto and fintech firms to set up operations in the city.

Stablecoins have practical everyday applications, from cross-border payments to trade settlement, so a regulated local issuer ecosystem could help modernise Hong Kong’s financial infrastructure and strengthen its role as an international payments and digital finance hub.

The emphasis on “application scenarios” also hints at real pilots and experiments to come.

Closing the Tax Gap on Crypto

Hong Kong plans to update its tax laws within the next two years to align with two international standards: the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework and the updated Common Reporting Standard, both developed by the OECD, a grouping of the world’s major economies.

In practice, this means crypto exchanges and service providers in Hong Kong will be required to collect and share financial information about their users with tax authorities, both locally and across borders. A bill to kick off this process will be introduced in the first half of this year.

For Hong Kong, this could be largely about staying in good standing with the international community. Countries worldwide are cracking down on people using crypto to hide wealth or dodge taxes, and Hong Kong’s joining this framework signals that it is committed to playing by global rules.

For everyday crypto users and investors, it means greater scrutiny of their holdings and transactions.

Hong Kong budget 2026-27 leafletSource: Hong Kong budget 2026-27 leaflet

A New Digital Infrastructure for Hong Kong’s Asset Market

Hong Kong’s CMU OmniClear, a financial infrastructure body that handles the clearing and settlement of debt securities, will launch a dedicated digital asset platform this year.

To start, the platform will focus on issuing and settling digital bonds, which are traditional bonds that have been converted into a digital, blockchain-based format. Over time, it will expand to cover other types of digital assets and connect with similar tokenization platforms across the region.

For Hong Kong, this is about building the plumbing that makes a modern digital asset market actually function. Right now, issuing and settling digital bonds can be fragmented and inefficient. A dedicated platform streamlines this and gives the market a reliable, regulated backbone.

Extending it to other digital assets and linking up with regional platforms is even more significant: it positions Hong Kong as a connectivity hub in Asia’s growing tokenization ecosystem, where real-world assets like bonds, funds, and property are increasingly being represented as digital tokens on a blockchain.

For issuers and investors, this could mean faster settlement, lower costs, and easier access to cross-border markets.

Testing the Future of Real-Time Digital Transactions

Last November, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) launched EnsembleTX, a pilot program that allows banks and financial institutions to conduct real transactions using tokenized deposits, essentially digital versions of bank deposits, and other digital assets in a live but controlled environment.

The HKMA plans to keep improving the system, with the goal of enabling round-the-clock, 24/7 settlement, while also working on establishing local standards to ensure Hong Kong’s digital financial infrastructure can connect smoothly with other markets around the world.

For Hong Kong, this matters because the ability to settle transactions at any hour rather than during traditional banking windows could fundamentally change how financial institutions move money and assets. It removes delays, reduces counterparty risk, and makes the system more efficient.

Developing local standards is equally important, as without common technical rules, different platforms and markets struggle to talk to each other.

By getting ahead of this now, Hong Kong is laying the groundwork to be genuinely interoperable with other major financial centres in Asia and beyond.

What’s in the Bigger Picture For Hong Kong?

What makes this moment notable is the coherence of the approach. Licensing stablecoins, tightening tax reporting, launching settlement platforms, and running live industry pilots showcase that the city is interlocking pieces of a broader strategy to make Hong Kong a credible and well-equipped digital asset hub in Asia.

The road ahead is not without its challenges, but Hong Kong is making a deliberate, infrastructure-backed commitment to lead the next chapter of global finance, and it is building the foundations to back that ambition up.

Featured image by The 2026-2027 Budget 

The post Hong Kong Dropped Its Most Ambitious Digital Asset Budget Yet appeared first on Fintech Hong Kong.

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