Crypto Law Profile

Legislative Proposal to Regulate Dealing in Virtual Assets

Hong Kong’s FSTB and SFC proposal would create an SFC licensing or registration regime for virtual asset dealing under the AMLO. Conclusions are published; an amendment bill is targeted for LegCo in 2026.

Hong Kong Proposed Bill

At a glance

Status Consultation concluded; amendment bill targeted for LegCo in 2026.
Primary regulator SFC licensing or registration under AMLO, with HKMA frontline role for banks and SVFs.
Regulated activity Business of VA dealing, aligned with Type 1 securities dealing concepts.
Transition No deemed-licensed transition is currently planned for existing providers.

Overview

Legislative Proposal to Regulate Dealing in Virtual Assets is a Hong Kong proposal from the Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau and the Securities and Futures Commission to create a licensing or registration regime for virtual asset dealing service providers under the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorist Financing Ordinance (Cap. 615). As of 17 June 2026, the proposal has not been enacted and no commencement date has been set. The authorities have published consultation conclusions and are preparing an amendment bill for the Legislative Council.

The proposal is part of Hong Kong’s broader digital asset framework, which already includes the virtual asset trading platform licensing regime and the stablecoin issuer regime. Official materials frame the dealer proposal as one of the remaining service-provider regimes needed to cover key nodes of the digital asset ecosystem. This profile is for reference and does not provide legal advice.

Key provisions of Hong Kong’s virtual asset dealing proposal

SFC licensing or registration

The revised proposal would require a person carrying on a business of virtual asset dealing in Hong Kong to be licensed by, or registered with, the SFC unless an exemption applies. Banks and stored value facility licensees would register with the SFC, with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority expected to act as frontline regulator for those institutions. The framework would sit under the AMLO and would include fit-and-proper, AML/CFT and other regulatory requirements.

Type 1-style regulatory perimeter

The consultation conclusions state that the scope of virtual asset dealing will be aligned with Type 1 regulated activity, dealing in securities, under the Securities and Futures Ordinance. In broad terms, the perimeter covers business conduct that makes or offers agreements, or induces agreements, to acquire, dispose of, subscribe for or underwrite virtual assets. The proposal remains activity-based, so the analysis turns on service substance rather than the label used by a provider.

Client asset custody and safeguards

For client virtual assets held in connection with dealer activity, the conclusions indicate that SFC-regulated virtual asset dealers will be required to custody client assets with SFC-regulated virtual asset custodian service providers. The authorities linked this approach to asset segregation, insolvency risk, fraud and cybersecurity concerns. The SFC also said it would consider operational feasibility and issue regulatory requirements in due course.

Active marketing, powers and sanctions

The proposal would prohibit unlicensed or unregistered persons from actively marketing virtual asset dealing services to the Hong Kong public, whether the marketing occurs in Hong Kong or elsewhere. It would also give the SFC and, where relevant, the HKMA supervisory and enforcement powers under the AMLO. The proposed sanctions are intended to align with Hong Kong’s existing virtual asset trading platform regime.

Status and timeline

The Government first consulted in February 2024 on regulating over-the-counter virtual asset trading services. After market feedback, the FSTB and SFC issued a revised consultation paper on 27 June 2025 for a broader virtual asset dealing regime. That consultation closed on 29 August 2025, and consultation conclusions were published on 24 December 2025.

Following a further consultation on advisory and management services, the FSTB and SFC stated in May 2026 that they were finalising proposals for virtual asset dealing, custody, advisory and management regimes, with a target of introducing the relevant bill to the Legislative Council within 2026. On 1 June 2026, an Acting Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury told the Legislative Council Panel on Financial Affairs that the Administration was formulating the amendment bill and targeting submission within the year.

Implementation issues to monitor

The authorities do not plan to provide a deemed-licensed transitional arrangement for existing virtual asset dealing service providers. Instead, the regime is expected to take full effect on commencement of the relevant statutory provisions, with the effective date still undetermined. The Government and SFC have said they will consider the time market participants need to adjust business models and have encouraged early pre-application engagement.

Key open items for editors to monitor include the formal bill title, bill number, commencement provisions, final exemptions, SFC regulatory requirements, and any final treatment of margin trading, staking, borrowing and lending within the dealer perimeter.

Key provisions

SFC licence or registration

Persons carrying on a Hong Kong business of VA dealing would need SFC licensing or registration, subject to fit-and-proper and other requirements.

Licensing Source

Type 1-aligned dealing scope

The revised VA dealing scope is intended to align with Type 1 dealing in securities under the SFO, using an activity-based perimeter.

Regulatory perimeter Source

AMLO and AML/CFT obligations

Licensed or registered VA dealers would be subject to AMLO Schedule 2 AML/CFT requirements and related SFC/HKMA regulatory standards.

AML/CFT Source

Client VA custody

The conclusions state SFC-regulated VA dealers will be required to custody client VAs with SFC-regulated VA custodian service providers.

Custody Source

Active marketing restriction

Unlicensed or unregistered persons would be prohibited from actively marketing VA dealing services to the Hong Kong public.

Marketing Source

No deeming arrangement planned

Existing VA dealing providers would not receive deemed status; the regime is expected to take full effect on commencement.

Transition Source

Timeline

  1. OTC VA consultation launched

    Hong Kong launched an initial consultation on licensing OTC virtual asset trading service providers.

    Under consultation Source
  2. Revised VA dealing consultation issued

    FSTB and SFC issued a revised consultation paper on a broader VA dealing service provider regime.

    Under consultation Source
  3. Consultation period closed

    The two-month consultation period for the VA dealing proposal ended, with 101 submissions received.

    Under consultation Source
  4. VA dealing conclusions published

    FSTB and SFC published consultation conclusions and said they would finalise legislative proposals.

    Enacted Source
  5. Further conclusions completed

    FSTB and SFC said they were finalising a bill for VA dealing, custody, advisory and management regimes.

    Proposed Source
  6. LegCo Panel briefing

    Acting SFST told the LegCo Panel that an amendment bill was being prepared for submission within 2026.

    Proposed Source

Who it affects

Actors

Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau, Hong Kong Monetary Authority, Legislative Council of Hong Kong, Securities and Futures Commission

Asset classes

Virtual assets

Official sources

Editorial note

Status as of 17 June 2026: consultation conclusions have been published and the Administration is preparing an amendment bill for LegCo in 2026. No bill number, enactment date or commencement date has been issued.