China May Introduce Yuan-Backed Stablecoin Within 5 Years, Says Circle CEO
According to Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire, China has a significant opportunity to launch a yuan-backed stablecoin, potentially within the next three to five years, as digital currencies increasingly integrate into global trade and finance. This prediction marks a shift from a speculative concept to a more policy-aligned idea. Chinese officials have been exploring the possibility of a yuan-backed stablecoin since August 2025 to enhance international adoption, despite the country's ban on crypto trading and mining since 2021. Allaire has been advocating for stablecoins as a means to internationalize the RMB since 2023, arguing that they could outperform central bank digital currencies. However, for China to introduce a yuan stablecoin, it would need to make the RMB fully convertible, allowing foreigners and markets to freely exchange yuan without strict government restrictions on capital flows. Currently, capital controls remain a crucial aspect of Chinese economic policy, making a stablecoin backed by the onshore yuan (CNY) challenging to implement. The global stablecoin market is currently valued at nearly $315 billion, with privately issued dollar-pegged tokens dominating the market.