How China opened the door to creating a direct rival to US payment systems



China’s recent changes to the rules governing its global payment system could pave the way for turning it into a genuine alternative to Western networks, according to a new report.

Beijing now appears to be moving towards building the Cross-border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) into a global platform compliant with multicurrency settlements and other foreign payment channels, said the study led by Ju Jiandong, a chair professor at Tsinghua University’s PBC School of Finance.

Beijing recently undertook the first major update to the business rules governing the CIPS – which previously focused on yuan-denominated payments – in eight years, with the new version coming into effect in February.

In the revised regulations, the system’s mandate has expanded from cross-border yuan transactions and financial operations to include the offshore yuan, as well as “other business approved by the People’s Bank of China”.

The new rules also include a line explicitly mandating the creation of separate operational guidelines for “the processing of cross-border payments in foreign currencies such as Hong Kong dollars through the CIPS”.

The updated regulations have also eliminated a set of strict rules on which financial institutions can participate in the CIPS, instead authorising operating institutions to formulate their own management rules for participants.

  • Related Posts

    Coca-Cola explores Mumbai IPO for India bottling arm, signals deeper push into high-growth market – Firstpost

    Coca-Cola said it is exploring a potential IPO in India for Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages in 2027, alongside a partial stake sale, marking a key step in the refranchising of its…

    Continue reading
    India’s manufacturing growth hits three-month high in May as demand remains strong – Firstpost

    India’s manufacturing activity expanded at its fastest pace in three months in May, driven by strong domestic demand and rising new orders, even as higher fuel costs and West Asia-related…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *