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Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire Sees Opportunity for a Yuan-Backed Stablecoin

Pizza
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Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire’s view that a yuan-backed stablecoin would present a “tremendous opportunity” is drawing fresh attention, but the underlying remark traces back to a 2023 interview rather than a new statement, and it now lands in a very different regional regulatory environment.

What Allaire Actually Said About a Yuan-Backed Stablecoin

The quote at the center of the recirculating headline comes from a July 11, 2023 CoinDesk report, in which Allaire argued Beijing should consider allowing CNY-backed stablecoins if it wants to internationalize the yuan.

Allaire said stablecoins may be a better route than a central bank digital currency for freer renminbi use in global trade and commerce, framing private tokenized money as more effective for cross-border reach than a state-issued alternative.

Cointelegraph independently reported the same day that Allaire suggested a yuan-based stablecoin might be China’s best bet for driving adoption of its national currency, and noted that China cracked down on cryptocurrencies in 2021 while the government said 13 billion digital yuan were in circulation as of January 2023.

The “JUST IN” framing implying an April 16, 2026 development is not supported by the fetched sources; all authoritative coverage of the core quote dates to July 11, 2023.

Why a Yuan Stablecoin Would Matter for Crypto Markets

A stablecoin pegged to the world’s second-largest economy’s currency would open new trading pairs, settlement rails, and liquidity pockets outside the dollar-dominated stablecoin stack that Circle itself helped build with USDC.

For scale, USDC currently trades at $0.999753 with a market capitalization of roughly $78.6 billion and 24-hour volume near $16.66 billion, a footprint that illustrates how large a fiat-backed digital asset can become when regulation allows it.

A CNY-denominated equivalent, even at a fraction of that scale, would give exchanges and payment firms a yuan rail that today does not exist in the same form, a gap recent commentary from U.S. lawmakers has highlighted as stablecoin rules advance, echoing themes in recent remarks from Senator Thom Tillis on stablecoin legislation.

Hong Kong’s New Regime Changes the 2026 Picture

The regional frame has shifted since Allaire first made the comment. The Hong Kong Monetary Authority said on July 29, 2025 that its regulatory regime for stablecoin issuers would come into effect on August 1, 2025, giving the city a live licensing framework that did not exist when the original interview was published.

That means any revived debate about CNY-backed stablecoins no longer sits in a pure hypothetical; a nearby jurisdiction with deep ties to mainland capital now has a working rulebook for issuance, which is part of why the 2023 remark keeps being recycled in 2026 coverage.

Mainland China’s 2021 crypto crackdown, however, remains the policy backdrop on the other side of the border, and there is no official indication that Beijing has moved toward endorsing a private yuan stablecoin.

Market Mood and Stablecoin Competition

Broader sentiment is cautious. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index is currently at 23, categorized as Extreme Fear, a reading that tends to coincide with risk-averse positioning across digital assets.

In that climate, stablecoin issuers have been the relative winners of the cycle, with reserve-backed tokens absorbing flows out of volatile assets. Tether, Circle’s main competitor, continues to expand its balance sheet, as seen in reports that Tether added 951 BTC to reserves while USDT’s footprint grew.

A credible yuan-backed issuer would enter a concentrated market where scale, banking access, and regulatory blessing, not technology, are the real barriers to entry. Allaire’s original argument was essentially that China’s policy choice, not engineering, would decide whether that market exists.

What Is Confirmed Versus What Is Inferred

Confirmed: Allaire made the “stablecoin over CBDC” case for the yuan in July 2023, and two independent outlets captured the quote. Hong Kong’s stablecoin regime is live as of August 1, 2025. USDC’s live market data and the current Fear & Greed reading are verifiable.

Not confirmed: that Allaire has made any new April 2026 statement on a yuan-backed stablecoin, or that Chinese authorities are actively reconsidering their mainland stance. The underlying South China Morning Post interview behind the original CoinDesk and Cointelegraph reports was not directly fetched, so the quote is corroborated through two secondary reports rather than the primary interview page.

Readers tracking broader stablecoin and market narratives can also follow adjacent moves such as Bitcoin’s recent push above $75,000, which is unfolding against the same Extreme Fear backdrop described above.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

About the author

About the author

Pizza

Pizza is a crypto market editor at CoinLineup covering altcoin markets, NFTs, and emerging blockchain ecosystems. Focused on identifying market trends and providing balanced analysis of new cryptocurrency projects and token economies.

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