Hong Kong just took another concrete step toward becoming Asia’s most comprehensively regulated crypto hub. On May 26, the city’s Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau (FSTB) and Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) published consultation conclusions on proposed licensing frameworks for virtual asset advisory and management service providers.
The licensing architecture maps neatly onto Hong Kong’s existing Securities and Futures Ordinance. Virtual asset advisory activities will align with Type 4 regulated activities, which currently govern securities advice. Management services, meanwhile, fall under Type 9, the category for asset management.
Both licensing regimes will sit under the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorist Financing Ordinance (AMLO), the same legal umbrella that already covers virtual asset dealing and custody services following conclusions published in December 2025.
Capital requirements have been outlined with surprising specificity. Entities will need minimum paid-up capital of HK$5 million. For firms that handle client assets, the liquid capital requirement rises to HK$3 million. Firms that don’t hold client assets face a much lower bar: HK$100,000 in liquid capital.
How this came together
The consultation conclusions stem from a public consultation period that closed on January 23, 2026. The process drew what regulators described as significant support from market stakeholders for establishing these distinct licensing regimes.
SFC CEO Julia Leung characterized the conclusions as a notable progression toward solidifying Hong Kong’s regulatory framework for digital assets. The SFC is also encouraging existing and prospective service providers to engage early in a pre-application phase.
Legislative proposals are slated for introduction to the Legislative Council later in 2026. Once passed, these will complete the licensing architecture alongside the already-established frameworks for VA dealing and custody services.
What this means for investors
For institutional investors, this kind of regulatory clarity is essentially a prerequisite for serious capital deployment. Large allocators, whether they’re pension funds, family offices, or insurance companies, typically cannot invest through channels that lack proper regulatory oversight.
The capital requirements also serve as a natural filter. HK$5 million in paid-up capital isn’t an enormous sum for legitimate financial services firms, but it’s enough to weed out undercapitalized operators. The HK$3 million liquid capital requirement for custodial firms adds another layer of financial resilience in what remains a volatile asset class.
For retail investors in Hong Kong, the practical upside is straightforward. Firms giving you crypto investment advice will be held to similar standards as firms giving you stock advice. That means conduct requirements, disclosure obligations, and regulatory accountability if things go wrong.
The risk, as always with regulation, is execution. The SFC will need adequate resources and technical expertise to supervise what could become a large and complex population of licensed entities. And firms operating in Hong Kong will need to watch for the final legislative text, since consultation conclusions can shift in meaningful ways before they become law.
cryptobriefing.com