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World News by Wild Rose

#HKMA ร—

HKMA holds base interest rate at 4%, following Fed as war inflation worries persist

Hong Kongโ€™s monetary authority has held its base interest rate steady, following the lead of the US Federal Reserve, as analysts said the inflationary impact of the US-Israel war with Iran had reduced the chances of a rate cut this year. The cityโ€™s base rate would stay at 4 per cent, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) said on Thursday, hours after the US Federal Reserve kept its target rate in the range of 3.5 to 3.75 per cent following the third meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee...

Hong Kong throws SMEs lifeline with raft of measures, HK$450 billion in loans

Hong Kong authorities have rolled out a fresh package of measures to support small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) reeling from the global fuel crisis and geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, including a 21 per cent increase in available bank lending to HK$450 billion (US$78.43 billion). The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), the cityโ€™s de facto central bank, on Wednesday said the measures for the SMEs were designed to improve access to financing, strengthen their business resilience,...

How PayMeโ€™s 3.3 million users and Hong Kong firms could start using stablecoins

For Hong Kongโ€™s 3.3 million PayMe users, everyday transactions such as buying coffee or splitting bills with friends could soon involve stablecoins, with HSBC preparing to introduce the digital currency in the second half of this year. That comes after HSBC Holdings, together with a Standard Chartered-led joint venture, became the first to obtain a stablecoin issuer licence from the Hong Kong Monetary Authority on Friday, marking a breakthrough in the cityโ€™s digital finance development. HSBC,...

Hong Kong regulator urged to expand stablecoin rules after cautious roll-out

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) is being urged to go further in loosening restrictions on stablecoins, after granting the cityโ€™s first two licences to banks to issue the digital currency. Bankers, venture capitalists and analysts said the long-awaited approvals โ€“ awarded to HSBC and a joint venture led by Standard Chartered โ€“ fell short of market expectations, underscoring the regulatorโ€™s cautious stance amid lingering risk concerns. โ€œIt came as a surprise that only two licences were...