China expands digital yuan to Singapore and ASEAN trade routes

The People's Bank of China has pledged to integrate the digital yuan into the New International Land-Sea Trade Corridor and establish a cross-border payment pilot with Singapore to promote the internationalisation of China's currency.

In an effort to further promote the internationalisation of China's currency, Beijing has pledged to expand the use of its digital yuan, including by establishing a cross-border payment pilot with Singapore. The measures, announced by the People’s Bank of China on Wednesday, are tied to a broader financial support plan for China’s New International Land-Sea Trade Corridor – a trade and logistics network, launched in 2017, that links landlocked cities in western China with hundreds of global ports via rail, road and shipping connections.

The PBOC, along with seven other government ministries and agencies, vowed to support the “exploration of pilot programmes for cross-border digital yuan payments between the [Chinese] mainland and Singapore” and promote “cross-border payments using central bank digital currencies” with places such as Thailand, Hong Kong, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. Hong Kong is the largest offshore yuan market.

The latest developments also come as China is looking to diversify exchanges with other countries amid its trade war with the United States, boosting adoption in Southeast Asia via China’s CIPS payment network.

Articles connexes

South Korean and Chinese representatives shaking hands over renewed currency swap deal documents, with flags and formal setting in Gyeongju.
Image générée par IA

Corée du Sud et Chine renouvellent l'accord de swap de devises de 70 billions de wons

Rapporté par l'IA Image générée par IA

La Corée du Sud et la Chine ont signé un accord le 1er novembre pour renouveler leur accord de swap de devises de 70 billions de wons pour cinq ans supplémentaires lors d'un sommet à Gyeongju. Cet accord, entre les banques centrales des deux nations, fait suite à l'expiration de l'accord précédent le mois dernier. Elles ont également signé six autres mémorandums d'entente pour renforcer la coopération en matière de commerce, de startups et de prévention de la criminalité.

China has added 12 banks to its digital yuan (e-CNY) system, more than doubling the number of institutions using it in day-to-day operations. The expansion deepens the currency's role in the financial system after Beijing pledged to “steadily develop the digital yuan” in its latest five-year plan.

Rapporté par l'IA

China is building parallel financial capabilities rather than directly challenging the dollar's status as the global reserve currency. The e-CNY has become one of the world's most advanced central bank digital currency experiments, processing over 3.4 billion transactions worth about US$2.3 trillion by the end of 2025.

At the South China Morning Post’s China Conference: Greater Bay Area, Hong Kong highlighted its role as a ‘superconnector’ and ‘super value adder’. The city is actively deepening ties in fintech with Shenzhen to build a world-class hub. Joseph Chan Ho-lim, deputy secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury, said Hong Kong will encourage local fintech firms to set up subsidiaries and support Shenzhen tech companies in leveraging its capital market.

Rapporté par l'IA

At a news conference in Beijing, Liu Jieyi, spokesman for the fourth session of the 14th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, stated that China will deepen high-level opening-up and accelerate free trade zone development to stabilize economic growth amid rising global uncertainties. He highlighted that China's economy demonstrated 'remarkable resilience and vitality' over the past year despite a complex external environment.

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) unveiled a 20-point road map on Monday to modernise the city’s trade finance ecosystem through Project CargoX, aiming to digitalise processes, expand lending to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and strengthen ties with mainland China and Asean. Howard Lee Tat-chi, a senior HKMA official, emphasised its role in maintaining competitiveness.

Rapporté par l'IA

Yao Qian, l'ancien responsable du projet de yuan numérique de la Chine, est accusé d'avoir accepté au moins 8 millions de dollars en pots-de-vin en cryptomonnaies alors qu'il était à la Banque populaire de Chine. Un documentaire d'une chaîne d'État a révélé les détails de la corruption, y compris la manière dont un subordonné a facilité les transferts. Le scandale surgit alors que la Chine promeut sa monnaie numérique de banque centrale au milieu d'une répression contre les cryptos privées.

 

 

 

Ce site utilise des cookies

Nous utilisons des cookies pour l'analyse afin d'améliorer notre site. Lisez notre politique de confidentialité pour plus d'informations.
Refuser