Digital Yuan Expansion Signals a New Era for FX Markets
Rapid growth in China’s digital yuan is signalling a broader shift in how money moves across domestic and international financial systems. By early 2026, cumulative transaction value had exceeded RMB 16.7 trillion, or around US$2.3 trillion, up from RMB 7.3 trillion in July 2024 and RMB 14.2 trillion in September 2025. Over the same period, total transaction volume rose from 950 million to 3.48 billion, while active wallets increased from 180 million to more than 250 million, highlighting the scale and speed of adoption.
A major milestone came with the move to Digital Yuan 2.0 in 2026. Rather than serving only as digital cash, the e-CNY now carries features that place it closer to a core financial asset within China’s banking system.
Integration into commercial bank balance sheets and reserve frameworks, legal protection comparable to traditional deposits, and the ability for verified wallets to earn interest similar to demand deposits all mark a significant expansion in function. This development strengthens the digital yuan’s role not just in payments, but across the wider monetary system.
Cross-border usage is also becoming more important through mBridge, a multi-CBDC settlement platform developed with the BIS Innovation Hub. By the end of 2025, mBridge had processed more than 4,047 high-value cross-border transactions worth over US$55.49 billion, with the digital yuan accounting for approximately 95.3% of total volume.
Compared with traditional cross-border settlement systems such as SWIFT, which often take two to five days, mBridge enables real-time settlement, reducing costs, improving speed, and lowering dependence on correspondent banking networks and intermediary currencies such as the U.S. dollar.
These developments matter for the foreign exchange market because they introduce an alternative layer of financial infrastructure rather than a direct replacement for the dollar. Faster settlement, lower transaction friction, direct currency-to-currency exchange, and programmable money functions all point to a system that could gradually reshape how trade and capital flows are handled. The impact may become especially visible in commodity trade, regional trade relationships, and emerging markets where efficiency, direct settlement, and strategic alignment play an increasingly important role.
China’s progress is also adding momentum to the global race for central bank digital currencies. As more economies move forward with their own CBDC plans, the structure of the FX market may gradually become more decentralised and multi-currency in nature. Over time, that could mean a system shaped less by legacy dominance alone and more by technological capability, interoperability, and sovereign control over digital financial infrastructure.
Read more about how the digital yuan, mBridge, and CBDC adoption are shaping the future of global FX markets.
Publication date:
2026-03-18 07:14:16 (GMT)