Beijing advocates enhanced regulatory frameworks for stablecoins in international payment infrastructure
Senior PBOC official highlights potential for stablecoins to transform international payment systems
Beijing emphasizes need for comprehensive stablecoin regulations and central bank digital currency alignment
Chinese monetary authorities intensify focus on stablecoin oversight mechanisms
Beijing associates stablecoin vulnerabilities with international payment infrastructure stability
Beijing has indicated heightened focus on stablecoin regulation as international financial infrastructure confronts mounting challenges from geopolitical tensions and market fragmentation. During a June 17 appearance at the 2026 Lujiazui Forum, Wang Xin, who leads the Research Bureau at the People’s Bank of China, delivered remarks focusing on financial governance transformation and multilateral cooperation strategies.
According to Wang, the international payment ecosystem requires enhanced security protocols, political neutrality, and operational efficiency to facilitate commerce and economic advancement. He emphasized the importance of strengthening connections between central banking payment infrastructure and consumer-facing payment platforms. China positioned payment system modernization as fundamental to reforming global financial governance structures.
Wang noted that achieving sustainable economic development depends on substantial volumes of international capital investment and financing activity. Such capital movements necessitate robust and varied payment mechanisms capable of facilitating seamless cross-border fund transfers. Existing payment infrastructure increasingly faces instability and heightened politicization.
As global finance experiences deeper fragmentation, Beijing has amplified its focus on payment system architecture. Wang warned that routine international financial transactions risk interruption when payment networks become instruments of political strategy. Consequently, he advocated for enhanced collaboration among monetary authorities, financial supervisors, and multinational organizations.
Wang indicated that stablecoin instruments could assume increased significance in future international payment operations. He stressed that authorities must evaluate their implications for the global monetary framework and payment infrastructure. China seeks comprehensive regulatory standards established prior to these digital assets achieving broader international adoption.
Additionally, he identified central bank digital currencies as requiring continued policy analysis. Their application in cross-border contexts could fundamentally alter settlement mechanisms and interbank coordination frameworks. Stablecoins persistently challenge current regulatory architectures due to their hybrid nature combining payment functionality with private-sector issuance.
Beijing has previously strengthened its regulatory approach toward cryptocurrency-based payment instruments. Authorities expanded enforcement measures in February to encompass RMB-pegged stablecoins and tokenized tangible assets. The regulatory framework prohibited unauthorized creation of renminbi-backed stablecoins beyond mainland jurisdiction.
Wang further advocated that global financial organizations should broaden assistance programs for emerging market economies. He recommended increased financial resource allocation, improved governance representation, and accelerated quota adjustment processes. Moreover, he suggested that multilateral development institutions should enhance administrative frameworks and operational procedures.
China connected these institutional reforms to climate financing requirements and sustainable development objectives. Numerous emerging economies need funding mechanisms, technological assistance, and strengthened payment infrastructure. Therefore, international institutions should prioritize capacity development and improved financial accessibility.
Hong Kong has pursued an alternative regulatory approach through establishing a formal licensing framework for stablecoin issuance entities. Its regulations apply to operators functioning within Hong Kong and specific Hong Kong dollar-denominated stablecoins. Meanwhile, mainland authorities have preserved stringent restrictions on cryptocurrency exchange activities, digital mining operations, and unauthorized asset tokenization.
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