
Experts describe the trend as a growing adaptation to a changing global financial landscape dominated by digital assets.
According to recent analysis by researchers including Zou Chuanwei of the Jiangsu Jinke Research Institute, overseas buyers sometimes cannot pay via traditional U.S. dollar bank transfers due to sanctions, foreign exchange controls, or banking restrictions.
In those cases, buyers are offered the option to pay using dollar-pegged stablecoins (such as USDT or USDC).
Those coins are then converted onshore into yuan by licensed payment agencies, ensuring exporters still receive local currency without relying on cross-border banking.
In other instances, Chinese companies barred from direct dollar payments — perhaps due to sanction-related restrictions — can still complete transactions by routing payments through third-party intermediaries: stablecoin payment agencies send the coins to a licensed virtual-asset exchange (for example in Hong Kong), where they are converted into U.S. dollars or Hong Kong dollars before funds reach the exporter.
The exporter’s experience resembles a conventional trade deal, though the funds flow through a digital-asset intermediary rather than a bank.
Supporters argue that stablecoins offer significant practical benefits: they enable near-instantaneous cross-border settlement, lower transaction costs, and avoid delays that may arise from banking channel restrictions or sanctions.
For exporters facing uncertainty over foreign buyers’ access to U.S. dollar bank transfers, stablecoins provide a viable — and increasingly attractive — alternative.
But the growing use of dollar-backed stablecoins also raises strategic and political concerns for Beijing.
Senior Chinese financial figures have warned that widespread adoption of such tokens could further entrench U.S. dollar dominance and erode Chinese monetary sovereignty.
China’s central bank and policymakers view stablecoins as potentially threatening their control over capital flows and financial regulation.
As a response, Beijing is reportedly exploring infrastructure for yuan-pegged stablecoins, particularly offshore via hubs like Hong Kong, to counterbalance the influence of dollar-linked tokens.
At the same time, the rise of stablecoin-based trade settlement underlines broader global shifts: digital asset frameworks, tighter financial regulations, and increasingly fragmented trade relations are reshaping how goods and money move across borders.
For Chinese exporters navigating a complex geopolitical and regulatory environment, stablecoins are emerging as both a shield and a strategic tool.


























