Chainlink Powers Breakthrough CBDC Exchange in Hong Kong-Australia Pilot

By Rachel Lourdesamy June 10, 2025 In CBDCs, Chainlink, Visa
  • Chainlink’s and Visa enabled real-time cross-border investment using digital currencies in Hong Kong’s e-HKD+ pilot programme.
  • The pilot showed how Australian investors could directly access Hong Kong funds with reduced delays and risks.
  • The findings aim to inform global standards for CBDCs and tokenised finance as digital asset adoption continues to grow.

Chainlink has enabled a major advance in cross-border digital finance through its role in Phase 2 of Hong Kong’s e-HKD+ Pilot Programme, led by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority. The trial simulated a real-time exchange between Australia’s A$DC stable coin and Hong Kong’s prototype central bank digital currency (CBDC). The cross-border pilot was in partnership with ANZ, Fidelity International, and ChinaAMC. 

Chainlink’s Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol (CCIP) facilitated the transaction by linking ANZ’s private DASChain with Ethereum’s public testnet, enabling near-instant settlement of assets to mitigate the traditional risks of cross-border transactions. 

The trial tested how investors in Australia could use A$DC or tokenised deposits to purchase tokenised money market fund (MMF) units from asset managers in Hong Kong using the e-HKD. This approach demonstrated the potential to eliminate intermediaries, reduce settlement times from days to seconds, and increase transparency and operational efficiency.

Source: Chainlink

Related: Singapore Dollar Stablecoin XSGD Debuts on XRP Ledger in Ripple-Powered Payments Push

Advertisement

Smart Infrastructure Enables Seamless Cross-Border Transfers

Visa’s Tokenised Asset Platform (VTAP) enabled the creation and transfer of the digital currencies, supporting near-instant payment and settlement through smart contracts. Chainlink supported the process with on-chain compliance services, including blockchain-based identity verification.

The pilot tested two token standards to see how well they work in real financial systems. The e-HKD used the popular ERC-20 standard, while tokenised bank deposits used ERC-3643, which includes built-in safeguards like identity verification and restricted transfers to meet regulatory rules.

The e-HKD+ programme builds on Hong Kong’s original 2022 pilot by expanding into programmable payments and interoperability between public and permissioned blockchains. With tokenised funds expected to grow to US$2 trillion by 2030, the pilot’s findings will help to shape future rules and systems for digital finance.

Related: Ripple CEO Denies Reported US$4–$5B Circle Acquisition Amid IPO Plans

Rachel Lourdesamy
Author

Rachel Lourdesamy

Rachel is a freelance writer based in Sydney with experience within financial services, marketing, and corporate communications in the APAC region. An avid reader and a graduate of the University of Sydney, she covers topics including business, finance and human interest.

You may also like