HKMA Doubles RMB Business Facility to 200 Billion Yuan Amid Strong Bank Demand

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Caroline Bishop

Jan 26, 2026 02:38

Hong Kong’s central bank doubles its RMB liquidity facility to RMB200 billion as 40 banks exhaust initial quotas, expanding offshore yuan reach to ASEAN and Europe.

Hong Kong’s monetary authority is doubling its renminbi lending facility to RMB200 billion ($27.5 billion) after overwhelming bank demand exhausted the initial allocation in just three months.

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority announced January 26 that the expanded RMB Business Facility takes effect February 2, backed by the People’s Bank of China through their currency swap arrangement. All 40 participating banks have either hit or are approaching their quota limits since the facility launched in October 2025.

What’s notable here: the money isn’t staying in Hong Kong. According to the HKMA, participating banks have channeled offshore yuan to corporate clients across ASEAN countries, the Middle East, and Europe—exactly the “hub-and-spoke” model regulators designed when they positioned Hong Kong as the global offshore RMB hub.

From Trade Finance to Broader Lending

The RBF replaced the more limited RMB Trade Financing Liquidity Facility that launched in February 2025. The upgrade expanded eligible uses beyond trade finance to include capital expenditure and working capital term loans. Crucially, it also extended access to overseas banking entities within participating banks’ corporate groups—meaning a Hong Kong bank can now funnel cheaper RMB liquidity to its Singapore or London subsidiaries.

“The increase of the facility size to RMB200 billion enables the HKMA to provide timely and sufficient RMB liquidity to meet market development needs,” said HKMA Chief Executive Eddie Yue. He noted the expansion will help “assist banks to enhance their RMB business” while supporting “the healthy development of the real economy.”

Clearing Bank Gets New Tools

The PBoC also approved a separate measure allowing Hong Kong’s RMB Clearing Bank to issue negotiable certificates of deposit in mainland China. This gives the clearing bank access to onshore liquidity across various maturities—a technical change that should improve its ability to manage offshore yuan market conditions.

The HKMA is now accepting quota applications from both existing participants seeking increases and new banks wanting to join. Phase 2 of the rollout in December 2025 had already expanded participation from an initial group to 40 lenders with RMB100 billion in total allocation.

For crypto markets watching yuan internationalization trends, this expansion signals Beijing’s continued push to reduce dollar dependency in trade settlement—a dynamic that could influence stablecoin adoption patterns in Asian markets over time.

Image source: Shutterstock

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