RWAs formally placed on China’s crypto blacklist
China’s leading financial industry bodies have effectively shut the door on real-world asset (RWA) tokenization, officially reclassifying it as a risky and illegal financial activity, signaling Beijing’s intent to remove private-sector blockchain finance from the country’s regulatory landscape altogether.
In a coordinated move, seven powerful financial industry associations — including the Asset Management Association of China, China Banking Association, Securities Association of China, China Futures Association, and China Payment and Clearing Association — issued a joint notice declaring real-world asset tokenization illegal under Chinese law.
The groups have combined efforts to pull RWAs out of the category of "experimental new technology". Instead, they are now defined as unauthorized financing and trading activities conducted through token issuance or token-like debt instruments, explicitly grouped alongside stablecoins, crypto mining, and so-called “air coins” as prohibited crypto-related practices.
The entities has claimed that RWA structures carries “multiple risks,” including fictitious or unverifiable assets, operational collapse, and speculative excess. Regulators stressed that no RWA projects have ever been approved by China’s financial authorities, eliminating any claim that such initiatives exist in a regulatory gray zone.
RWA activities framed as criminal financial violations
The supplementary notice goes further, grounding the crackdown directly in China’s Criminal Law and Securities Law. Authorities warned that RWA projects may constitute illegal fundraising, unauthorised securities offerings, or illegal futures operations.
Crucially, regulators rejected arguments that tokenized structures can guarantee ownership or redemption of underlying assets, stating that risk spillovers remain uncontrollable even in “compliant” or offshore-registered projects.
The enforcement framework also introduces joint liability across the entire Web3 service chain. Project founders, technology providers, marketers, influencers, payment processors, and even overseas firms with staff in mainland China may be held legally responsible under a “knew or should have known” standard — effectively dismantling domestic support infrastructure for RWA initiatives.
Legal experts described the move as a rare cross-industry, cross-regulatory coordination, typically reserved for moments when authorities perceive systemic financial risk. Wu Blockchain characterized the message as unequivocal
"Regulators are not seeking to refine or regulate RWAs — they are seeking to exclude them entirely from China’s legal and financial system, with no room for pilot programs or phased oversight."
The timing aligns with Beijing’s broader push to reinforce monetary sovereignty. In recent months, the People’s Bank of China has discouraged tech giants from pursuing stablecoins, while accelerating internationalization efforts for the digital yuan (e-CNY), including interest-bearing wallets and cross-border payment infrastructure.
A sharp contrast with Western crypto policy paths
China’s hardline stance contrasts sharply with developments in the United States, where lawmakers passed the GENIUS Act, creating a federal framework for payment stablecoins.
Coinbase chief policy officer Faryar Shirzad has warned that regulatory hesitation in the U.S. could weaken its competitive position as China promotes the e-CNY for global settlement — but Beijing’s approach makes clear it favors state-controlled digital currency, not tokenized private finance.
By formally labeling RWAs illegal, China has drawn a bright red line around what kinds of blockchain innovation it will tolerate — and what it will not. The decision likely reduces fraud risk and preserves tight control over capital flows, aligning with Beijing’s long-standing financial stability priorities.
However, it also pushes tokenization innovation offshore, potentially ceding leadership in RWA infrastructure to jurisdictions like Singapore, the UAE, and the U.S.
While China may succeed in protecting its domestic system, the ban risks isolating its crypto ecosystem from one of the fastest-growing segments of global digital finance — reinforcing a future where blockchain innovation exists in China only when fully subordinated to state control.