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Hong Kong’s largest licensed cryptocurrency exchange, HashKey Holdings, began trading on Wednesday, marking a milestone for the city’s digital asset ambitions as it positions itself as a global crypto hub despite Beijing’s continued ban on cryptocurrency trading.
HashKey shares closed at HK$6.67, down 0.15% from the IPO price of HK$6.68, after a volatile first session. The stock climbed as much as 6.6% to HK$7.12 before falling 8.4% to an intraday low of HK$6.12. By comparison, Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng Index ended the day up 0.9%.
Despite recent weakness across digital asset markets, investor demand for HashKey’s IPO was strong. According to company filings, the institutional tranche was 5.5 times oversubscribed, while the retail tranche attracted demand nearly 394 times the shares on offer.
HashKey’s listing is the first IPO by a crypto company in Hong Kong, coming amid heightened volatility in major cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin, the world’s largest digital asset, has fallen sharply in recent months after hitting record highs earlier this year, including a drop of as much as 36% from its peak above $126,000 in early October.
Speaking on listing day, Xiao Feng, HashKey’s chairman and chief executive, said he remains optimistic about the long-term outlook for digital assets despite short-term market fluctuations.
“My confidence is only growing stronger,” Xiao said, citing the expansion of regulatory and compliance frameworks as a foundation for sustainable industry growth.
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Founded in 2018, HashKey provides a broad range of digital asset services, including asset management, brokerage, tokenisation, and the operation of Hong Kong’s largest licensed crypto exchange.
While cryptocurrency trading and mining remain banned in mainland China, Hong Kong has taken a different approach, introducing licensing and regulatory frameworks to attract digital asset firms and compete with other global financial centres such as Dubai and Singapore.
Xiao noted that mainland China’s restrictions were aimed at curbing fraud, pyramid schemes, and misuse of stablecoins, adding that those measures do not conflict with Hong Kong’s regulatory strategy.
“Hong Kong continues to promote policies regarding digital assets, and we have benefited from that,” he said, referencing the city’s “one country, two systems” model.
Although HashKey is currently loss-making, the company plans to prioritise cash flow over near-term profitability while continuing to invest in growth. According to its prospectus, proceeds from the IPO will be allocated toward technology infrastructure, market expansion, partnerships, and operational and risk management capabilities.
Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan attended the listing ceremony, underscoring official support for the city’s digital asset strategy.
HashKey’s debut comes as Hong Kong’s stock exchange heads toward its strongest year since 2021, with more than $34 billion raised from IPOs so far this year, according to LSEG data.




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