Hong Kong formed a new industry group with JPMorgan, HSBC, and UBS to accelerate tokenized bond adoption and market growth.
Crypto News
Hong Kong is pulling some of the world's largest banks into its plan to grow the market for tokenized bonds. On June 5, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) said it had formed an expert group to drive that effort forward.
The group is less a starting point than the next step in a years-long program. The HKMA began studying bond tokenization in 2021 through a partnership with the Bank for International Settlements (BIS).
Concrete issuance followed. In February 2023, the government sold HK$800 million ($102 million) of tokenized green bonds. The next year it returned with a HK$6 billion ($766 million) multi-currency digital green bond denominated in Hong Kong dollars, Chinese yuan, US dollars, and euros.
In 2025, the government issued the then-largest digital bond on record. That offering was also the first to bring together the e-CNY and the e-HKD, the digital forms of China's and Hong Kong's currencies.
Early Focus on the Rulebook
The new group held its first discussions in May 2026. Those talks centered on Hong Kong's legal and regulatory regime and how it governs the issuance and trading of tokenized bonds.
Xiao Feng, chairman and CEO of HashKey Group, framed the challenge as broader than the technology itself. He said that scaling commercial adoption is a systematic undertaking, one that requires coordinating legal and regulatory frameworks, underlying infrastructure, and the wider industry.
The pattern extends across Asia. Ripple has partnered with Kyobo Life Insurance in South Korea to support tokenized government bond transactions. The Japan Securities Clearing Corporation additionally began a trial in April 2026 with Mizuho, Nomura, and Digital Asset to test blockchain-based collateral using Japanese government bonds.
