Transactions on the China-backed mBridge cross-border payments pilot have surpassed US$55.5 billion (AU$84.9 billion), according to an Atlantic Council analysis, as participating central banks test an alternative to dollar-centric payment rails.
The mBridge prototype, involving central banks from China, Hong Kong, Thailand, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, has now processed more than 4,000 cross-border transactions.
The total represents roughly a 2,500-fold increase since 2022 and estimates that the digital yuan accounts for about 95% of the platform’s volume.
Moreover, People’s Bank of China figures cited in the report show the e-CNY has processed more than 3.4 billion transactions worth about 16.7 trillion yuan, or roughly US$2.4 trillion (AU$3.6 trillion). That’s an increase of more than 800% from 2023.
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China has also moved the digital yuan into a more deposit-like product by allowing it to bear interest, a break from the common view that CBDCs should not pay yield.
The interest rate was aligned with demand deposit rates, around 0.05% at major banks at the time, and framed the change as a legal and policy signal that the e-CNY is shifting from “digital cash” toward deposit-style money with similar status and protections to bank deposits.
This contrasts with recent US policy debates that could restrict yield on stablecoins, prompting industry figures like Skybridge Capital founder Anthony Scaramucci and Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong to warn that limiting stablecoin rewards could make dollar-based digital rails less competitive internationally versus interest-bearing alternatives such as China’s e-CNY.
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The post China’s Digital Yuan Goes Global as mBridge Transactions Surge Past $55B appeared first on Crypto News Australia.


Powell said the Federal Open Market Committee is weighing interest rates on a meeting-by-meeting basis, with no long-term consensus. US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the 19 members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) remain divided on additional interest rate cuts in 2025.At Wednesday’s press conference after the Fed’s 25-basis-point rate cut, Powell said the central bank is trying to balance its dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability in an unusual environment where the labor market is weakening even as inflation remains elevated. Powell said:Powell said that the “median” FOMC projection from the Federal Reserve’s Summary of Economic Projections (SEP), the Fed’s quarterly outlook for the US economy that informs interest rate decisions, projected interest rates at 3.6% at the end of 2025, 3.4% by the end of 2026, and 3.1% at the end of 2027.Read more
