China Tells Its Tech Giants to Halt Stablecoin Plans Amid Regulatory Review

Written by cryptosovereignty | Published 2025/10/21
Tech Story Tags: crypto-regulation | china-stablecoin-regulation | stablecoin-freeze-china | crypto-market-crash-2025 | cbdc-vs-stablecoin | digital-yuan | crypto-compliance-china | pboc-digital-currency-project

TLDRChina has asked major tech firms like Ant Group and JD.com to pause their stablecoin initiatives under Hong Kong’s pilot program. The directive, led by the PBoC and CAC, reflects Beijing’s intent to safeguard monetary stability and maintain control over currency issuance while advancing its own digital yuan. The move is not a crypto ban, but a clear assertion of state authority over digital money.via the TL;DR App

October has been a difficult month for global crypto adoption. On October 11, the market suffered its biggest single-day crash of the year, wiping out roughly $20 billion in value as Bitcoin tumbled more than 14 percent to around $104,800.

Days later, the situation worsened when Beijing stepped in to halt private-sector stablecoin initiatives, per Financial Times.

Several Chinese Tech Giants, including Alibaba-backed Ant Group and JD.com, had planned to issue stablecoins via Hong Kong’s pilot programme this summer. But following guidance from the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) and the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), the firms agreed to put their plans on hold.

Beijing’s move reflects a precautionary regulatory stance rather than a broad anti-crypto campaign.

“The real regulatory concern is, who has the ultimate right of coinage — the central bank or any private companies on the market?” a source familiar with the issue told the Financial Times.

The decision appears aimed at maintaining monetary stability and regulatory oversight while China continues developing its own central bank digital currency, the digital yuan.


Written by cryptosovereignty | We believe everyone should have ultimate control and ownership over their cryptographic assets and digital transactions.
Published by HackerNoon on 2025/10/21