Seven Chinese Financial Associations Declare RWA Tokenization Illegal - The Great Wall of Regulation Rises Again
China's financial establishment just dropped the hammer. Seven heavyweight associations—banking, securities, insurance, the whole crew—issued a joint statement slamming the door on Real World Asset tokenization. Call it illegal. Call it a warning shot. Call it the regulatory state reasserting its iron grip on the financial innovation frontier.
The Core Message: No Tokenized Bridges to Traditional Finance
Forget blending DeFi with your factory or your treasury bonds. The statement cuts through the hype with surgical precision: turning physical assets into digital tokens on a blockchain? Not happening. Not on their watch. It bypasses all the established channels, they argue—the licensed brokers, the registered exchanges, the entire compliance apparatus built over decades.
Why This Matters Beyond the Border
This isn't just a local memo. It's a global signal. China's financial regulators are drawing a line in the sand, creating a blueprint for how major economies might quarantine crypto's encroachment into mainstream capital markets. Watch other jurisdictions take notes. The move protects the old guard, sure—another classic case of incumbents building moats while pretending it's about consumer safety.
The Ripple Effect for Crypto's Next Narrative
So where does this leave the RWA dream? Knocked back, but far from out. Innovation has a habit of flowing around barriers. Expect talent and capital to migrate to friendlier shores, accelerating projects in Singapore, the UAE, or even within more nuanced EU frameworks. The chase for a trillion-dollar tokenized debt market just got a lot more geopolitical. Sometimes, the biggest catalyst for a decentralized future is a centralized 'no.'
Source: Weixin
The statement listed RWA alongside stablecoins, “,” and crypto mining as primary manifestations of illegal VIRTUAL currency activities, effectively categorizing tokenization projects as high-risk, fraudulent methods rather than as emerging financial technologies awaiting regulatory clarification.
Attorney Liu Honglin described the coordinated announcement as “” noting that such association collaborations typically occur only at critical junctures in preventing systemic financial risks.
RWA: Financing Activity Subject to Securities Law
The joint notice explicitly defined real-world asset tokenization as “financing and trading activities through the issuance of tokens or other rights and debt instruments with token characteristics,” stating such operations carry “multiple risks, including the risk of fictitious assets, the risk of business failure, and the risk of speculation.“
Regulators emphasized that “my country’s financial regulatory authorities have not approved any real-world asset tokenization activities,” eliminating any possibility that projects could claim to be in regulatory exploration phases or awaiting registration approval.
This stance differs from that of counterparts such as Singapore, which leads the global ranking in 2025 for RWA adoption.
Officials particularly outlined three critical violations under existing Chinese law associated with RWA operations.
Projects issuing tokens to the general public while raising funds face illegal fundraising charges, while facilitating transactions or distributing tokens without permission constitutes unauthorized public securities offerings.
Token trading involving leverage or betting mechanisms may constitute illegal futures business operations, with these characterizations grounded directly in provisions of China’s Criminal Law and Securities Law rather than general policy warnings.
The document stated that RWA token structures cannot guarantee legal ownership or the liquidation of underlying assets, regardless of whether project teams believe their assets are genuine and technology transparent, with regulators judging that risk spillover remains uncontrollable even in supposedly compliant projects.
China’s securities regulator is quietly urging domestic brokerages to halt their real-world asset (RWA) tokenization operations in Hong Kong.#RWA #Chinahttps://t.co/wPU4yuNGRK
The warning specifically addressed projects attempting to circumvent regulations through “,” “,” and “t” narratives.
Joint Liability Under New Enforcement Framework
The notice specifically targeted not only project operators but the entire Web3 service ecosystem supporting RWA activities, stating that “domestic staff of relevant overseas virtual currency and real-world asset token service providers, as well as domestic institutions and individuals who knowingly or should have known that they are engaged in virtual currency-related businesses and still provide services to them, will be held accountable according to law.“
This “” standard establishes a legal presumption of liability based on reasonable objective judgment rather than requiring proof of subjective intent, directly negating the common Web3 operational model of offshore company registration with mainland Chinese staff.
Attorney Honglin noted this means teams cannot escape accountability by claiming pure technology service provision or infrastructure support roles.
Project planners, technology outsourcing providers, marketing agents, influencer promoters, and payment interface providers all face potential legal consequences if they provide services to RWA projects targeting Chinese users.
The directive stated that even hiring a single operations person in China could expose ostensibly offshore projects to legal risks.
This enforcement approach effectively terminates the entire domestic Web3 service chain built around RWA within China, as supporting services lose viable business models alongside the prohibition on primary operations.
The crackdown follows frequent fraudulent activities operating under RWA branding, with the document noting that “criminals are taking advantage of this to promote related trading and speculation activities, using stablecoins, worthless coins (such as π coin), Real-World Asset (RWA) tokens, and ‘mining’ as a guise to carry out illegal fundraising, pyramid schemes, and other illegal activities.“
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The timing coincides with China’s push to internationalize its digital yuan through a new Shanghai operations center focused on cross-border payments and blockchain services, while simultaneously blocking major tech firms ANT Group and JD.com from issuing stablecoins in Hong Kong to preserve the state’s monopoly on currency issuance.