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Institution profile

HSBC

GSIB

HSBC is the GSIB that has run more public tokenisation pilots in APAC than any other Western bank, distributed across a tokenisation platform (HSBC Orion), a tokenised gold programme, tokenised deposit experimentation, and roles in jurisdictional sandboxes from MAS Project Guardian to HKMA's Project Ensemble. The footprint spans the asset side (custody, issuance, distribution) and the cash side (tokenised deposits, settlement participation), with no single flagship product the way JPMorgan has Kinexys. For an operator the practical read is that HSBC shows up wherever a regulator is convening, which makes it a useful counterparty for jurisdictional pilot work but a less useful one if you need a specific live rail to settle against today.

Tokenisation positioning

HSBC's posture is plural rather than singular. The bank has not consolidated its tokenisation activity under one rebrand, which puts it in contrast with JPMorgan's Kinexys consolidation. Instead, multiple programmes run in parallel inside the existing banking licence: HSBC Orion as a proprietary issuance and settlement platform, the tokenised gold programme, tokenised deposit pilots, and selective participation in central-bank-led pilots. The dual-listed structure (UK group, Hong Kong as the Asia centre) means tokenisation activity in HK and Singapore is managed close to local regulators, which is part of why HSBC has been a recurring participant in HKMA and MAS work.

The strategic frame is that HSBC treats tokenisation as a banking-licence activity. Tokenised deposits sit on the bank's balance sheet as conventional deposit liabilities. Custody and issuer services for tokenised funds and bonds are extensions of existing custody and issuer-services lines, not a separate product unit. This is conservative in the GSIB sense: no stablecoin issuer subsidiary, no publicly named role on a permissionless rollup, and no VASP or DTSP licences sought anywhere.

Named products and pilots

HSBC Orion. Proprietary tokenisation platform used as the issuance and registry rail for HSBC-led bond issuances. Public references include sterling bond issuance via Orion in the UK, tokenised bond work under Hong Kong's HKD and offshore-RMB multi-currency green bond series (the 2025 HKSAR multi-currency green bond at approximately USD 1.3bn-equivalent is widely reported as the world's largest single tokenised-bond programme), and selected European institutional bond issuances out of Luxembourg. Cumulative issuance volume across deployments was approximately USD 3.5bn by late 2025 (HSBC media release). Asset class is bonds (sovereign, supranational, FI). Operational rather than symbolic where used. On 15 December 2025 HM Treasury selected HSBC Orion as the platform for the UK Digital Gilt Instrument (DIGIT) pilot, the first G7 sovereign digital-bond programme of its scale, with tokenised commercial-bank deposits as the cash leg for atomic DvP (The Block, 16 Dec 2025). See HSBC Orion + UK DIGIT theme.

Tokenised gold. Institutional tokenised physical gold programme out of London, where allocated gold in HSBC's vault is represented on a permissioned ledger. One of the few tokenised commodity products inside a GSIB rather than a fintech wrapper. As of late 2025 volume disclosure has been thin.

Tokenised deposits. Publicly described but not branded as a single platform the way JPMorgan has with Kinexys Digital Payments. Pilot surface inside Project Guardian (Singapore) on the FX and fund workstreams, and inside Project Ensemble in Hong Kong on the deposit and asset layers above the wCBDC. Treat as live in pilot context rather than as a production cross-border rail.

Project Guardian (Singapore). Recurring named participant across Guardian workstreams covering tokenised funds and FX. Operational, not just a logo.

Project Ensemble (Hong Kong). One of the commercial-bank counterparties in the tiered ledger sandbox. Given the Asia centre is HK, this is the natural in-jurisdiction sandbox for the bank.

mBridge. Under post-graduation governance HSBC has been visible as a commercial-bank counterparty for cross-border settlement test flows, alongside other regional banks. Whether the bank is committing balance-sheet flow versus participating at a test level is not consistently disclosed.

Hong Kong tokenised bonds. HSBC has been involved as arranger, custodian, or platform provider on multiple tranches of the HKSAR multi-currency green bond programme. The exact role per tranche varies, best read off the issuance documentation per deal.

Institutional partnerships

HSBC has not joined Kinexys. As of late 2025 the bank is not a publicly named participant on JPMorgan's Kinexys Digital Payments rail, which means the two GSIBs run parallel tokenised-deposit infrastructures rather than connecting them. Whether HSBC chooses interoperability with Kinexys, with Partior, or with a third option will be one of the more consequential commercial-bank-money choices of the next eighteen months.

Partior. HSBC has been associated with Partior in coverage of the consortium, but Partior has been characterised in public reporting as having gone through quiet periods, and HSBC's operational footprint there is not clearly disclosed. Treat as ambiguous until the next public update.

Custody and issuer services. HSBC Custody and Issuer Services is a top-tier global custodian; the tokenisation work sits on top of that infrastructure rather than as a parallel build. Asset-manager partnerships on tokenised funds typically run through this line, with specific named counterparties not consistently disclosed in raw entries this period.

Regulatory perimeter

HSBC operates as a globally-systemically-important bank under the FSB GSIB framework. The UK is the home regulator (PRA on prudential, FCA on conduct), with the dual-listing in HK adding HKMA and SFC HK supervision over the local entities. Singapore branch is regulated by MAS, Japan branch by JFSA (FSA Japan). The Basel Committee basel sco60 cryptoasset standard is the binding global capital framework, applied through PRA in the UK and via the local supervisors in APAC.

All of HSBC's named tokenisation activity to date sits inside the existing banking licence rather than under a separate VASP or DTSP licence. That is the relevant fact for a counterparty considering whether to settle against an HSBC tokenised liability. The token is a representation of a deposit at HSBC, with HSBC as the obligor, and the prudential and resolution framework is the one that applies to a vanilla HSBC deposit. No stablecoin issuer subsidiary, no Hong Kong Stablecoins Ordinance application surfaced this period, no GENIUS Act permitted issuer route engaged. The bank has stayed on the bank-money side of the deposit-versus-stablecoin line set out in Stablecoin types and Tokenised deposits.

Recent activity

  • 10 Apr 2026. The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited (HSBC's HK subsidiary) was awarded one of the first two Hong Kong Stablecoins Ordinance issuer licences (HSBC HK statement). HSBC plans an HKD-denominated stablecoin launch in H2 2026, integrated into the bank's existing PayMe (3.3m users) and HSBC HK Mobile Banking App distribution rails, with three named initial use cases: peer-to-peer payments via PayMe, peer-to-merchant payments via PayMe, and tokenised investment subscriptions via the HSBC HK App. The reserve composition is committed to "high-quality, liquid assets held in segregated accounts" but specific HQLA composition and disclosure cadence have not been published. This is the first HSBC stablecoin issuance globally, and the structural shift from "no stablecoin issuer subsidiary" (the position held through 2025) to bank-issued HKD stablecoin under HKMA supervision is the most consequential HSBC tokenisation move since HSBC Orion. See HK Stablecoins Ordinance.
  • 15 Dec 2025. HM Treasury selected HSBC Orion as the platform for the UK Digital Gilt Instrument (DIGIT) pilot, the first G7 sovereign digital-bond programme of its scale (HSBC media release). DIGIT pairs sovereign tokenised debt issuance on Orion with tokenised commercial-bank deposits as the cash leg for atomic DvP, with HSBC's existing track record on the HKSAR multi-currency green bond programme (USD 1.3bn-equivalent in 2025, widely reported as the world's largest single tokenised-bond programme issued to date) as the architectural reference. Cumulative Orion issuance volume across deployments reported at approximately USD 3.5bn by late 2025. See HSBC Orion + UK DIGIT theme.
  • 13 Nov 2025. HSBC named as one of the participating banks in the EnsembleTX phase of Project Ensemble, alongside Standard Chartered and Bank of China (Hong Kong). The interaction between HSBC's H2 2026 HKD stablecoin and HSBC's EnsembleTX participation on the tokenised-deposit side raises a structurally interesting question about whether HSBC will run two parallel HKD on-chain instruments (a stablecoin and a tokenised deposit) or whether the two products converge.
  • Through late 2025 and early 2026, raw entries otherwise surface HSBC primarily as a recurring named participant in jurisdictional sandboxes (Project Guardian in Singapore, Project Ensemble in Hong Kong, mBridge under post-graduation governance) rather than as a step-change product launch.

Open questions

  • Whether HSBC will consolidate its tokenisation activity under a single named platform akin to Kinexys, or continue running multiple programmes in parallel.
  • Whether the HSBC tokenised deposit infrastructure is interoperable with Kinexys, Partior, or any other cross-bank rail, or sits as a closed bank-internal system.
  • The H2 2026 HSBC HKD stablecoin's underlying ledger architecture, reserve attestation cadence, and on-chain transferability perimeter (whether the instrument is constrained to PayMe and HSBC HK App distribution or can be held in third-party wallets).
  • Whether the HSBC HKD stablecoin is positioned to settle through EnsembleTX alongside HSBC's tokenised-deposit issuance, or whether the stablecoin and tokenised-deposit rails sit parallel inside HSBC's HK product range.
  • Volume disclosure on the tokenised gold programme. The product has been live for a long time but throughput is not consistently reported.
  • HSBC's role on specific HK multi-currency green bond tranches per deal. Public summaries vary, primary source is the issuance documentation.
  • The current operational status of Partior and HSBC's role on it as of late 2025 is not surfaced in raw entries.
  • Agentic commerce posture. HSBC has not, in the entries surfaced, taken a public position on AI agents holding tokenised deposits or transacting with tokenised assets. This is a notable gap for a bank with this level of pilot footprint, and one to watch.

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