The latest step towards Hong Kong’s ambitions to lead Asia’s tokenised securities market came this week with a whitepaper focused on the basics of tokenised bonds. The Digital Asset Clearing Center “DACC.HK” joined the Hong Kong Economic Council to release the document, as detailed in a company press release. For market participants looking to track where the real-world asset (RWA) story meets live infrastructure, this is a signal worth noting.
What makes this particular collaboration notable is not the white paper itself (Hong Kong has produced many policy documents), but the entity behind it. DACC operates as a digital asset clearing center, the kind of post-trade plumbing that institutional investors demand before committing a serious balance to on-chain instruments. Without a credible clearing layer, tokenized bonds remain a proof-of-concept exercise. This makes them start to resemble a market.
Infrastructure before the hype
The city has already tried to address the symbolic debts. In early 2023, the Hong Kong government issued a HK$800 million tokenized green bond, using a private blockchain platform from Goldman Sachs. That experiment proved the concept, but it didn’t create an open market. While the DACC whitepaper is light on details in its public release, it is believed to address what comes after issuance: the finality of the settlement, atomic delivery versus payment, and the legal status of tokenized claims.
Getting these foundations right is more important than choosing blockchain. If clearing risk can be reduced to near zero through smart contract-driven escrow and a regulated clearinghouse, the yield differential on tokenized bonds could attract liquidity currently held in short-term Treasuries or stablecoins. That’s the price, and that’s why a clearing center stepping forward changes the conversation from “if” to “when.”
On a global level, the tokenized bond market is still in its infancy, but is growing at a pace that surprises even skeptics. The broader real-world asset (RWA) category crossed the $20 billion mark on-chain at the end of June, with tokenized bonds contributing an increasing share as institutional pilots converted into live trades. Hong Kong, with its English law-based common law system and its deep bond market, is positioned to absorb some of this flow.
Hong Kong’s regulatory edge
While other jurisdictions tackle tokenized security with a strict enforcement approach, Hong Kong has opted for a structured sandbox model. The Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) published a comprehensive tokenization circular in November 2023, setting out clear requirements for treating tokenized securities as traditional securities. That clarity is in stark contrast to the US, where the SEC’s stance remains controversial. Just this month, major US banks acted to derail a sweeping crypto bill just days before a Senate vote, reflecting ongoing tension between incumbents and digital asset infrastructure.
The divergence creates an arbitrage window. Issuers looking to tokenize bonds and access Asian institutional liquidity may find a faster path to compliant issuance in Hong Kong than waiting for U.S. federal laws to play out. If the DACC whitepaper maps out a viable clearing framework, that path could be shortened further.
It is still open which blockchain networks will ultimately support these tokenized bonds. As of this week, the chains with the highest developer activity (led by Ethereum, BNB Chain, and Polygon, according to recent data) are the strongest contenders, but Hong Kong hasn’t been prescriptive. Several banks have tried bonds on private and public networks, and it appears the market is more likely to opt for a multi-chain approach rather than a single “winner.”
What the whitepaper doesn’t answer
Despite all the progress, large gaps remain. The release does not specify whether DACC’s proposed clearing model is based on a centralized custodian or a distributed ledger-native approach. There is also no mention of whether the clearing house will hold assets directly or simply operate a clearing layer. Each design choice carries different risk profiles – from centralized hacking risk to the vulnerability of smart contracts – and institutions will account for these differences in the bonds themselves.
Furthermore, the timeline from whitepaper to live market is unclear. Hong Kong’s digital bond issuances have so far been one-off. A market is needed to convert tokenized bonds into a liquid secondary market
