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Hong Kong boosts yuan supply to banks in push for China currency

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 3 min read
Hong Kong boosts yuan supply to banks in push for China currency
The total size of the so-called RMB Business Facility in the city will rise to 200 billion yuan
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(Jan 26): Hong Kong will double the supply of yuan available for banks to borrow in the latest step to meet growing demand and help China boost the global use of its currency.

The total size of the so-called RMB Business Facility in the city will rise to 200 billion yuan, with effect from Feb 2, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority announced Monday (Jan 26). The programme allows banks to receive loans of up to one year from the de facto central bank, using the Shanghai Interbank Offered Rate as the pricing benchmark.

The facility has received an “overwhelming response” from the banking sector since its launch in October 2025, with the existing quota fully allocated to 40 participating banks, the HKMA said in a statement. It has not only served local corporate needs but also channelled yuan funds to regions such as Southeast Asia, the Middle East and Europe, it added.

Global appetite for funding in the yuan, whose borrowing costs are cheaper than those in the dollar and euro, has increased in recent years. The expanded programme would help Hong Kong strengthen its role as a leading offshore yuan hub and aid Chinese authorities’ efforts to internationalise its currency at a time of waning confidence in the dollar.

The announcement “comes much sooner than expected, indicating stronger-than-expected demand for yuan liquidity in the offshore market” as lower interest rates made the yuan a much more attractive funding currency, said Becky Liu, head of China macro strategy at Standard Chartered Bank plc.

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Outstanding yuan loans issued by China’s onshore banks to overseas entities rose to a record of 2.52 trillion yuan as of the end of 2025, up from 979 billion yuan as of end-2022, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The RBF is a replacement of an original yuan-funding facility launched in February 2025 to support trade finance, with its use broadened to include corporates’ intra-group funding activities and loans for capital expenditure. The HKMA has access to an 800 billion yuan currency swap with the People’s Bank of China to back the programme.

Meanwhile, the PBOC also voiced its fresh support for developing the yuan business in Hong Kong.

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China will increase the annual issuance of offshore yuan-denominated government bonds and explore the possible launch of offshore bond futures, PBOC Deputy Governor Zou Lan said in a speech at a forum on Monday.

“We see yuan internationalisation accelerating in 2026 as the yuan is gradually emerging into a ‘safe haven’ currency, backed by its strong economic and trade fundamentals,” said Stanchart’s Liu. She expects more global funding and settlement as well as direct investment to be conducted in the yuan.

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