Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA) officially announced on Friday support for a stablecoin pilot project led by the three major banks—Mizuho Bank, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG), and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC). The experiment aims to explore how multiple banking groups can jointly issue stablecoins that meet Japan’s legal definition of “electronic payment tools,” and to accelerate the modernization of domestic payment systems while ensuring regulatory compliance. This pilot is the first official project under the FSA’s “Payment Innovation Project” (PIP), scheduled to run from November 2025, marking a significant step forward in Japan’s blockchain payment innovation efforts.
This official statement from Japan’s Financial Services Agency confirms earlier media reports that the Japanese banking industry is actively exploring the use of distributed ledger technology (DLT) to enhance payment efficiency. The alliance includes not only the three “trillion-yen” banks but also heavyweight participants such as Mitsubishi Corporation, Progmat Inc., and Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking Corporation.
The core goal of this stablecoin pilot project is to verify the feasibility of jointly issuing stablecoins across multiple banking groups within the existing financial regulatory framework. These stablecoins will be explicitly classified as “electronic payment tools” under Japanese law, ensuring clarity and compliance at the legal level.
The FSA clearly states that this experiment will verify whether the system can operate “legally and appropriately” under current financial regulations. This strict compliance requirement ensures that the issuance and operation of the stablecoins do not exceed existing financial risk control boundaries.
This pilot is the first official project under the FSA’s “Payment Innovation Project” (PIP). It leverages the FSA’s framework supporting fintech proof-of-concept initiatives since 2017, aiming to pave the way for blockchain-based payment innovations. The results of the experiment, including in-depth insights into legal and compliance aspects, will be published on the FSA’s official website.
The modernization of Japan’s financial infrastructure is accelerating. The collaboration among banks to issue stablecoins aims to enable faster, more efficient digital transactions, especially within institutional networks.
This approach contrasts interestingly with regulatory explorations in other regions, where authorities often adopt a wait-and-see or restrictive stance. By integrating stablecoins into the existing legal framework, Japan seeks to harness the advantages of DLT while minimizing potential impacts on financial stability.
For underlying blockchain ecosystems like Ethereum, although Japan’s stablecoin project may utilize permissioned or consortium blockchains, the regulatory direction provides an important precedent and confidence foundation for tokenized assets and digital currencies in Japan.
The launch of the stablecoin pilot by Japan’s three major banks, supported strongly by the FSA, signals a clear move by traditional financial giants to embrace blockchain technology and upgrade digital payment infrastructure. Classifying stablecoins as “electronic payment tools” reflects a gradual regulatory innovation approach. The outcomes of this experiment will not only influence Japan’s domestic payment landscape but also offer valuable lessons for global financial institutions on implementing DLT applications under strict regulation, indicating a maturation path for institutional digital currencies in the future.
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