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Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the stablecoin USDT were spotlighted at a cryptocurrency store in Hong Kong on July 29, 2025.
Photo by Peter Parks | AFP | Getty Images
This article is part of CNBC’s The China Connection newsletter, offering insights and analysis on the driving forces behind the world’s second-largest economy. Subscribe here.
The big story
The race between the United States and China in artificial intelligence is now extending into the realm of cryptocurrencies.
U.S. President Donald Trump hinted at this emerging competition after his meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping last Thursday, a trade discussion that garnered global attention.
“I want to make crypto great for America,” Trump stated in an interview with CBS News. “Just like we’re leading in AI, we aim to lead in crypto as well. I intend to ensure it stays that way.”
“I don’t want China or anybody else to take it away,” he said.
Whether Trump genuinely views Beijing as a serious threat or not, his remarks come as China sends new signals on its crypto ambitions. Beijing has banned domestic crypto transactions since 2021, while Hong Kong, a special administrative region of China, has maintained a managed system that encourages the development of digital assets.
On Monday, Hong Kong eased its restrictions further — allowing its licensed virtual asset trading platforms to connect directly with global crypto exchanges and list new digital assets and Hong Kong-regulated stablecoins, forgoing the need for a 12-month track record.
The announcement coincided with Hong Kong’s state-organized 10th FinTech Week, which opened just as the political and business spectacle in South Korea began to fade.
TradFi meets DeFi in Hong Kong
Hong Kong has been quick to follow Washington’s lead, allowing exchange-traded funds tracking spot , which he said was the single largest liquidation day for crypto, even surpassing the infamous FTX exchange collapse.
USD vs. Chinese yuan
The next phase of competition may not be about tokens themselves, but about control. Governments are increasingly eager to control the market through stablecoins backed by their own fiat currencies.
Much of the recent excitement over digital assets in Hong Kong stems from its push into stablecoins this year, following the U.S. Genius Act, which aims to support dollar-pegged stablecoins. It’s taking the U.S. dollar competition with the Chinese yuan into the digital era.
“Both are striving to expand their own currency usage to build up their respective global user ecosystem,” said Winston Ma, adjunct professor of law at the New York University School of Law.
But it won’t be easy, he pointed out, as Beijing has yet to convince individuals to adopt the digital yuan at scale, which is China’s central bank–issued digital currency designed to replace some cash transactions while allowing tighter oversight of its financial system.
China has sought to promote a digital version of its yuan currency in recent years but it has yet to break into the mainstream.
“U.S. dollar stablecoins may experience the same when they start to emerge,” Ma said.
The U.S. dollar accounted for just under half of global payments by value in September, tracked by international financial messaging service SWIFT, while the Chinese yuan climbed one spot into fifth place with a 3.17% share.
Last week, China’s central bank governor Pan Gongsheng promoted the digital yuan, while taking a more conservative view of stablecoins than many expected, reaffirming Beijing’s long-standing restrictions on speculative trading in virtual currencies.
Still, bitcoin blockchain data showed China remains a major player, ranking third in global bitcoin mining activity — behind the U.S. and Russia.
That’s not a statistic Trump is likely to overlook. Forbes estimates the U.S. president himself holds roughly $870 million worth of bitcoin—one of the world’s largest personal stashes.
— CNBC’s Anniek Bao contributed to this report.
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Carlos Gutierrez, former U.S. Commerce Secretary, said both Washington and Beijing got what they wanted out of Trump and Xi’s meeting in South Korea. He added that markets will likely welcome signs that the two countries are giving each other reasons to strengthen ties.

James Kim, chairman and CEO of the American Chamber of Commerce in Korea, said the relationship between the United States and China is especially important for South Korea. He added that he was pleased with the outcome of the trade talks between Washington and Seoul.

Xiaomeng Lu, director of geo-technology at Eurasia Group, said Nvidia has likely made more progress with the U.S. government than with China amid ongoing tensions over semiconductor export controls.
Need to know
U.S.-China reach one-year trade truce. If the latest U.S.-China trade deal is finalized, tariffs are expected to stay lower, and large-scale disruptions to rare earths trade are unlikely over the next 12 months.
Nvidia in China. As the chipmaker stays largely locked out of a $50 billion market, CEO Jensen Huang on Friday acknowledged that “China doesn’t want H20 or any American chips.”
China’s factory activity slumps. The official purchasing managers’ index and its private sector counterpart both showed a drop in manufacturing in October from September amid U.S. trade tensions.
Quote of the week
We are still at a very early stage [of asset allocation into crypto], probably 7.5% crypto adoption globally. So going forward, I still envisage quite a lot of demand coming.
— Richard Teng, Binance CEO
In the markets
Chinese markets rose 0.46%, defying a broader regional decline as investors pulled back from AI-related stocks.
The Hang Seng Index was little changed, while the CSI 300 has gained nearly 18% so far this year.
The offshore Chinese yuan last traded at 7.1307 against the dollar.
— Lee Ying Shan
The performance of the Shanghai Composite over the past year.
Coming up
Nov. 5 – 10: China International Import Expo in Shanghai
Nov. 6 – 9: China’s “Six Little Dragons” AI startups to hold a roundtable during the World Internet Conference in Wuzhen
Nov. 7: Exports, Imports for October
Nov. 9: CPI, PPI for October