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China’s securities regulator has directed mainland brokerages to temporarily halt real-world asset (RWA) tokenization activities in the China Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, according to multiple reports. The move, first reported by Forbes and corroborated by Yahoo Finance and Gadgets360, reflects Beijing’s cautious approach to balancing innovation with financial stability and regulatory control. The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has reportedly asked several brokerages to pause projects converting traditional assets—such as real estate, corporate bonds, and private credit—into blockchain-based tokens for offshore markets[1][3][4].
The CSRC’s action underscores three primary concerns. First, it aims to mitigate risks associated with tokenizing credit-sensitive assets amid ongoing property market stress in mainland China. Regulators fear that tokenized assets could create perceptions of maturity transformation or act as a pressure valve for distressed balance sheets[1]. Second, the pause allows time for harmonizing regulatory frameworks between mainland China and China Hong Kong, where the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) has been advancing tokenized securities rules but lacks a unified mainland policy on crypto trading[1]. Third, the CSRC seeks to align RWA tokenization with its broader strategy for tokenized money, including central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) and tokenized deposits, which the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) has been testing in its Project Ensemble sandbox[1].
The pause has immediate implications for mainland-affiliated issuers and brokers. Firms like Seazen Group, which had explored tokenizing real-estate-linked assets in China Hong Kong to address liquidity challenges, may now re-prioritize lower-risk RWAs such as tokenized government bonds or short-duration credit instruments[1]. For banks, the focus remains on advancing tokenized deposit systems and interbank settlement infrastructure, as outlined in the HKMA’s Project Ensemble[1]. Global asset managers using China Hong Kong as a distribution hub are advised to separate tokenization’s operational benefits—such as faster T+0/T+1 settlements and fractional ownership—from the underlying asset risks[1].
China Hong Kong’s digital-asset ambitions remain intact, with the SFC having already established a stablecoin licensing framework and the HKMA promoting tokenized deposit experiments[2]. Over 77 firms have expressed interest in participating in China Hong Kong’s stablecoin licensing regime, signaling continued investor appetite despite the mainland’s caution[2]. However, the CSRC’s guidance introduces uncertainty for cross-border RWA projects, particularly those involving mainland-linked assets. Analysts like Jakob Kronbichler of Clearpool describe the pause as a “measured approach” to ensure tokenized products incorporate risk safeguards[2].
Geopolitically, the move highlights the tension between China’s capital controls and China Hong Kong’s efforts to position itself as a digital-asset hub. While the SFC has emphasized substance-over-form regulatory principles for tokenized products, the CSRC’s intervention underscores that mainland oversight will prioritize macroprudential goals over rapid innovation[1]. This dynamic could influence other jurisdictions considering tokenization, as regulators in the U.S. and Europe weigh similar risks. The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), for instance, recently announced a pilot program for tokenized collateral in derivatives markets[5], illustrating the global scope of regulatory experimentation.
The CSRC’s pause does
signal a reversal of interest in RWA tokenization but rather a recalibration. As Forbes notes, China’s approach aligns with a broader global trend of “policy sequencing,” where regulators prioritize stabilizing tokenized money infrastructure before expanding to higher-risk assets[1]. This strategy mirrors the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) recent roundtable on tokenization, which emphasized the need for legal clarity and investor protections[6]. For China Hong Kong, the challenge remains balancing its role as a fintech innovator with the necessity of aligning with Beijing’s risk-averse framework.Quickly understand the history and background of various well-known coins

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