HSBC and Anchorpoint Are Hong Kong's First Licensed Stablecoin Issuers and More Banks Are Following Globally
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Hong Kong's decision to grant its first stablecoin issuer licenses to HSBC and Anchorpoint Financial last month marked a significant moment in the institutional adoption of regulated stablecoins, and the fake token scams that followed within weeks underscore just how much market attention the licenses generated. HSBC's planned Hong Kong dollar stablecoin, expected to launch in the second half of 2026 through PayMe and the HSBC HK Mobile App, would make it one of the first major global banks to bring a regulated fiat-referenced stablecoin to retail users through its own consumer banking channels. Anchorpoint's HKDAP token, once it actually launches, will operate under HKMA oversight covering reserve backing, redemption rights, and governance standards that Hong Kong's licensing framework requires.
The momentum around institutional stablecoin issuance extends well beyond Hong Kong. Morgan Stanley's investment management arm launched a Stablecoin Reserves Portfolio last week, allowing stablecoin issuers to park reserve funds in one of the bank's money market funds while earning interest. Western Union is targeting May for the launch of its US dollar-backed stablecoin USDPT, which will be built on Solana and issued by Anchorage Digital Bank. Meta has launched USDC payouts for creators in Colombia and the Philippines with more than 160 markets planned. The convergence of regulated bank-issued stablecoins in Asia, institutional reserve products in the US, and major platform integrations signals that the stablecoin market is moving into a phase where traditional financial institutions are not just observing from the sidelines but actively building the infrastructure that will define how digital dollars move globally.