Hong Kong has taken a decisive step to industrialize its tokenized bond market, with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) forming a high-level expert group to push the technology from pilot projects into routine use in global debt markets.
hkma convenes major banks and fintech firms
The new body brings together major financial and technology players, including JPMorgan Securities, HSBC, Standard Chartered Bank, UBS, Ant Digital, and HashKey Group.
According to HKMA, the group will review regulatory frameworks, operational models, and technology stacks needed to scale bond tokenization across both domestic and cross-border markets. The members held their first meeting in May, focusing on how Hong Kong’s legal and regulatory regimes can better support the issuance and trading of tokenized bonds.
HKMA’s latest move is designed to solve the issue of scale, shifting away from isolated digital bond deals toward a repeatable, interoperable framework for tokenized securities that can be used by the wider market.
from pilots to large-scale digital bond deals
The initiative builds on several years of experimentation.
In 2021, HKMA partnered with the Bank for International Settlements to study how tokenization could be applied to bond markets. That work led to a series of landmark transactions.
In February 2023, Hong Kong issued its first tokenized green bond worth HK$800 million (US$102 million). In early 2024, authorities followed with a HK$6 billion (US$766 million) multi-currency digital green bond, denominated in Hong Kong dollars, U.S. dollars, Chinese yuan, and euros.
In 2025, Hong Kong completed what was then the world’s largest digital bond issuance, and the first to use both the e-CNY and e-HKD central bank digital currencies within the same deal. The new expert group is intended to extend that momentum into ongoing industry collaboration and market-ready infrastructure.
global race to upgrade public debt infrastructure
Hong Kong’s push comes as other major jurisdictions are moving in parallel to modernize public debt markets using tokenization.
In the United States, the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) has been testing distributed ledger technology to record representations of U.S. Treasury securities held by its subsidiary. DTCC is working toward an operational rollout that would initially handle a limited set of tokenized trades from July 2026, followed by a broader commercial launch in October that will include U.S. Treasury bonds.
Across Asia, South Korea introduced a blockchain-based settlement system for tokenized government bonds in April. Built in partnership with Ripple and Kyobo Life Insurance, the system is already functioning as live financial infrastructure, aiming to cut settlement times from the standard two days to nearly real time.
Japan is conducting similar experiments. The Japan Securities Clearing Corporation launched a proof-of-concept in April with Mizuho, Nomura, and Digital Asset to test the use of Japanese government bonds as blockchain-based collateral. That trial is running on the Canton Network, the same distributed ledger infrastructure that DTCC plans to use for its tokenized Treasury project.
government bonds emerge as primary testbed
The rapid development of tokenized real-world assets underscores why government bonds have become the preferred starting point.
One report from Citi in early June 2026 estimated that tokenized real-world assets could expand from roughly US$17 billion today to about US$5.5 trillion by 2030. As of April 2026, more than half of the existing tokenized asset market consisted of tokenized U.S. Treasury bills, bonds, and money market funds, reflecting a clear institutional tilt toward highly liquid, low-risk government debt as the first asset class to move on-chain.
The consistent focus on sovereign bonds in Hong Kong, the U.S., Japan, and South Korea signals a deliberate strategy: build the new digital infrastructure on the most stable instruments in the fixed-income universe, then extend to more complex products.
why the underlying rails matter for traders
For market participants, the convergence of central banks, clearing houses, and global banks around a handful of blockchain networks and standards indicates a structural shift in how fixed-income markets will operate.
The Hong Kong expert group, together with DTCC’s upcoming rollout and Asia’s live settlement projects, points to a coordinated effort to upgrade the core plumbing of bond markets. Rather than treating tokenized bonds as one-off demonstrations, authorities are designing systems that can support regular issuance, trading, collateralization, and settlement at scale.
Traders watching this transition may pay close attention to which technological platforms, such as the Canton Network and similar infrastructures, are being chosen and stress-tested by major institutions. These networks are increasingly likely to become the core rails over which large volumes of government debt and related products will move.
Public statements from banking executives, including the chief executive of Standard Chartered who has argued that nearly all transactions will eventually be tokenized, reinforce that this is viewed as a long-term, structural transformation of market infrastructure, not a passing trend.
Explore how real-world assets go on-chain in our guide to tokenized equities and their impact on traditional finance.
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