Singapore’s crypto crackdown on unlicensed exchanges could drive liquidity to Hong Kong


Hong Kong could benefit from Singapore’s recent move to oust unlicensed cryptocurrency companies, according to analysts, potentially leading to a significant injection of liquidity.

On May 30, the Monetary Authority of Singapore instructed cryptocurrency firms incorporated in the city and offering services abroad to acquire a licence or leave the country. Singapore’s central bank subsequently set a June 30 deadline for crypto service providers in the city state to stop offering digital token services to overseas markets.

This combined with Hong Kong’s recently passed stablecoin ordinance, set to take effect on August 1, and Beijing’s plan to liquidate confiscated cryptocurrencies in the city could all benefit the jurisdiction’s efforts to build a crypto hub, according to Joshua Chu, a lawyer and co-chair of the Hong Kong Web3 Association.

“These moves are intimately connected, forming a strategic blueprint that could redefine Hong Kong’s role in the global virtual asset ecosystem,” Chu said. “This is likely to attract quality projects looking for a compliant, liquid, and globally connected base.”

This illustration photograph taken on June 30, 2025 shows bitcoin representation coins against the backdrop of the Singapore national flag. Photo: AFP
This illustration photograph taken on June 30, 2025 shows bitcoin representation coins against the backdrop of the Singapore national flag. Photo: AFP

He added that Singapore’s crackdown was part of a broader trend to regulate the industry and weed out bad actors. Thailand last month moved to ban five crypto exchanges, including major operators OKX and Bybit, while Dubai’s Virtual Asset Regulatory Authority recently updated its rules to strengthen investor protections.

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