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Asia’s crypto regulatory landscape in 2025 shifted decisively from theoretical debate to practical implementation, with stablecoins and real-world asset tokenisation emerging as core priorities.
Regulators across the region focused on building workable frameworks rather than announcing sweeping new policy visions.
Industry experts said the regulatory progress laid critical foundations for deeper institutional participation in digital assets in 2026.
Stablecoins gained prominence as regulators sought payment-like crypto instruments capable of integrating with existing financial systems.
Asset tokenisation advanced in parallel, with multiple jurisdictions launching pilots tied to real settlement and issuance use cases.
Against the backdrop of 2025 — where the U.S. has led a clear acceleration in crypto-friendly policymaking — APAC regulators have doubled down on delivering clear, proportionate rules and driving real regulatory implementation.
Angela Ang said.
Eddie Xin said Asia’s regulatory focus moved beyond abstract frameworks toward embedding stablecoins and tokenised assets into payment and settlement infrastructure.
Hong Kong emerged as a leading jurisdiction after its long-awaited stablecoin law came into force in August.
The legislation established a licensing regime for fiat-referenced stablecoin issuers following years of consultation.
Hong Kong’s framework positioned the city among the earliest global jurisdictions with a dedicated stablecoin regime.
Stablecoins were unmistakably in focus, in part because they are the most payment-like crypto asset and therefore hold the greatest promise of utility.
Angela Ang said.
Regulators in Hong Kong also accelerated tokenisation efforts through Project Ensemble and related initiatives.
These programmes tested settlement models combining tokenised deposits with on-chain delivery of assets.
In November, the government launched pilots centred on “real value” tokenisation of traditional financial instruments.
Singapore also advanced its regulatory agenda in 2025 with the Digital Token Service Provider regime taking effect in June.
The framework requires providers with a substantive presence in Singapore to be licensed and meet anti-money laundering standards.
Singapore’s Monetary Authority said tokenisation had moved beyond experimentation and into commercial deployment.
Three major banks conducted interbank overnight lending using a wholesale Singapore dollar central bank digital currency.
The trial aligned with Singapore’s ambition to scale tokenised finance using secure settlement assets.
Japan strengthened oversight while encouraging stablecoin experimentation during the year.
In November, Japan’s Financial Services Agency backed a stablecoin pilot involving the country’s three largest banks.
Regulators also considered requiring crypto exchanges to maintain emergency reserves against hacks and disruptions.
Regulatory clarity prompted Japanese asset managers to explore crypto-based investment trusts.
South Korea saw parallel momentum, with banks and crypto firms developing stablecoin initiatives.
In September, custody provider BDACS launched KRW1, a won-backed stablecoin, on the Avalanche network.
Authorities in South Korea signalled that a formal stablecoin framework is under development.
Industry leaders said regulated onshore markets will play a larger role in 2026.
Hong Kong, Singapore, and Japan are all building regulated, onshore ecosystems led by licensed players.
Tim Sun said.
Eddie Xin said Asia’s regulatory paths are converging toward normalised digital asset issuance and tokenised settlement.
Purely speculative use cases will face significantly higher compliance thresholds and capital requirements.
Xin said.
Chen Wu said real-world asset tokenisation will “define 2026,” calling its expansion inevitable.
Asia is moving into a fully institutional digital-asset era.
Tim Sun said.