China’s central bank and nine other regulators this week cemented a wide-reaching crackdown on crypto: a joint notice issued Friday bans unapproved yuan-linked stablecoins and declares most real-world-asset (RWA) tokenization activities illegal unless explicitly authorized and conducted on approved financial infrastructure. What the notice says - The regulators classify virtual currencies, stablecoins and tokenized assets as potential sources of systemic financial risk. They reiterate that cryptocurrencies are not legal tender in China and that related trading, issuance and intermediary services are “illegal financial activity” unless specifically approved. - The notice accuses speculative crypto and RWA tokenization of “disrupting economic and financial order and endangering the property safety of the people,” and frames the steps as necessary to protect national security and social stability. - Importantly, any unapproved overseas issuance of renminbi-linked stablecoins is explicitly barred. - The regulators define RWA tokenization as using cryptographic and distributed ledger technology to convert ownership or income rights into tradable tokens, and say such activities — including related technical or intermediary services — are illegal unless approved and run inside designated financial channels. Expert reactions and policy aim Analysts say the move is aimed at preserving Beijing’s control over the money supply and shielding the digital yuan from private competition. “Thwarting any private market activity that could impact the stability and control of their money supply,” Logan Lemberger, Head of Global Financial Partnerships at MassPay, told Decrypt, “Activity outside their control is outside their approval.” Jamie Green, COO at stablecoin liquidity layer Superset, described the notice as a form of “regulatory enclosure”: by demanding prior approval for renminbi-linked tokens, Beijing is positioning itself as the gatekeeper for the digital yuan’s global footprint and forcing RWA projects either to stop or migrate to permissioned, state-monitored infrastructure. Industry context and likely impact This is China’s first formal crypto ban announcement of 2026 and adds to a decade-long pattern of tightening measures, Christian Ruz of crypto agency Hype told Decrypt. He expects limited disruption to global markets, noting many stablecoin and RWA firms operate internationally and that Chinese investors may already prefer U.S.-pegged stablecoins for risk reasons. Still, the notice puts added pressure on any mainland-linked tokenization projects and further constrains pathways that had been explored through Hong Kong. Chinese regulators previously told brokers and financial institutions to suspend RWA tokenization activities tied to Hong Kong, and they intervened in tech firms’ plans to pursue renminbi-linked stablecoins via Hong Kong licensing — projects that were subsequently paused. What’s next Decrypt has reached out to the People’s Bank of China for comment and will update this story if it responds. For market participants and tokenization projects, the notice signals that Beijing intends to keep tightly controlled hands on anything that could affect monetary sovereignty or enable capital flight, effectively limiting private stablecoin issuance and decentralized RWA efforts unless they move into state-approved, permissioned environments. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news