Share this article

Crypto industry experts at Consensus see Asian institutions pivot toward stablecoins

Panelists at the conference discussed how regulatory progress in Hong Kong and Japan creates a structured path for capital allocation.

Feb 12, 2026, 2:39 p.m.
Consensus Hong Kong
Consensus Hong Kong (CoinDesk)

What to know:

  • Institutional crypto transactions in Asia grew 70% year over year to reach $2.3 trillion by mid-2025.
  • Regulatory clarity in hubs such as Hong Kong and Singapore has driven a shift from speculation to structured yield.
  • Major banks in Japan now develop stablecoin solutions to build regulated rails for traditional capital.

Hong Kong — Institutional crypto participation across Asia is moving into a more mature phase as regulators establish clear frameworks for stablecoins and exchange-traded funds. Large players now favor market-neutral strategies and regulated vehicles over direct, directional exposure to digital assets.

Vicky Wang, president of Amber Premium, highlighted this shift during a panel discussion at Consensus Hong Kong. She noted that while transaction volumes reached $2.3 trillion by mid-2025, capital allocation remains cautious. "The institutional participation in Asia, I would say it's real, but at the same time it's very cautious," Wang said. She observed that institutions prefer "market neutral and yield strategy" over aggressive directional bets.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

Fakhul Miah, managing director of GoMining Institutional, pointed to the recent approval of ETFs and perpetuals in Hong Kong as a major driver for liquidity. He noted that even traditional "mega banks" in Japan are now working on stablecoin solutions. These developments allow traditional capital to enter the space through familiar structures. Miah explained that institutions must pass through "risk committees and operational governance structures," which historically did not exist for onchain products.

The focus for many Asian institutions has shifted toward real-world asset tokenization and stablecoin settlement. Wendy Sun, chief brand officer at Matrixport, noted that while these topics are popular, there remains a gap in internal treasury adoption. "For the internal treasury-based stablecoin, we are still waiting for the standard to come out," Sun said. She argued that the behavior of these institutions is becoming more "rule-based and scheduled" rather than pursuing short-term gains.

Wang concluded that the industry's future rests on the convergence of artificial intelligence and digital assets. "In the future, digital assets would not be a just alternative asset class or an alternative financial system," Wang said. "It will be the financial layer of the AI."

AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk's full AI Policy.

More For You

More For You

The Genius Act ripple effect: Sui executives say institutional demand has never been higher

Stephen Mackintosh, chief investment officer of Sui Group Holdings, and Evan Cheng, CEO of Mysten Labs at Consensus Hong Kong 2026 (CoinDesk)

Evan Cheng and Stephen Mackintosh said 2025 marked a turning point for institutional adoption, with tokenization and agentic commerce emerging as the next frontier.

What to know:

  • Executives cited ETF flows, DAT growth and major trading firms entering crypto.
  • Tokenization and instant settlement could blur the line between traditional and decentralized markets.
  • Low-latency design and composable tooling aim to power AI-driven and tokenized financial use cases.