Circle CEO Sees Yuan Stablecoin in 3-5 Years
Circle chief executive Jeremy Allaire said China could launch a yuan-backed stablecoin within three to five years, casting the next phase of stablecoin growth as a contest over which currencies gain a bigger role in global trade and payments. He made the remarks in Hong Kong, where he said a yuan stablecoin would be a “tremendous opportunity” for China if it wants the renminbi to compete more effectively in digital finance.
The comment shifts the stablecoin debate away from crypto trading and back toward currency power. Dollar-linked tokens still dominate the market, and Allaire’s point is that stablecoins are starting to matter less as a niche crypto product and more as a payment infrastructure that can help a currency move across borders faster and more cheaply.
Allaire tied the idea to a tech race
Allaire said the stablecoin market is becoming both a currency competition and a technological competition. That fits Circle’s position as the issuer of USDC, one of the largest dollar stablecoins, but it also reflects a broader industry view that the next fight will center on payment rails, settlement speed and which currencies are easiest to use in digital form.
He also pointed to Hong Kong’s role in that shift. Last week Hong Kong granted its first fiat-backed stablecoin licenses to HSBC and Anchorpoint Financial, giving the city a live regulatory framework as firms and policymakers in the region consider how local-currency tokens could be used in payments and tokenized finance.
China would need a policy shift
A yuan stablecoin would still require a real policy shift from Beijing. China banned crypto trading and mining in 2021, and last year officials were only beginning to consider whether yuan-backed stablecoins could help expand the currency’s global use without reopening the wider crypto market.
That debate has been building for months. In July 2025, the Ant Group and JD.com were lobbying for offshore yuan stablecoins in Hong Kong, arguing that dollar-linked stablecoins were strengthening US monetary reach and leaving China without a similar digital channel to extend the renminbi abroad.
The bigger fight is over global payments
The market backdrop helps explain why the issue is becoming sharper. Data revealed that USDC circulation rose 72% in 2025 to $75.3 billion, while more than 99% of stablecoins are denominated in US dollars. That would leave any future yuan token trying to enter a market where the dollar already has a huge head start.
For China, that makes a yuan stablecoin less a crypto story than a trade and payments story. Allaire’s timeline is only a prediction, not a signal from Beijing. Still, the fact that a major dollar-stablecoin issuer is publicly discussing a yuan competitor shows how far stablecoins have moved from crypto trading into the broader payments contest.