Beijing flipped the switch on a cross-border payment system for the digital yuan, accelerating a long-running plan to push the RMB into more of the global plumbing.
China's central bank confirmed the official launch of a cross-border payment rail for the digital yuan, taking a project that has been quietly piloted for years and dropping it into live use across multiple trading partners. Officials framed the move as a logical next step for a currency that already settles a large slice of regional trade.
The rail is built around the e-CNY platform that domestic users already know, but with hooks into partner central banks and selected commercial networks. The pitch to neighbors: faster settlement than legacy correspondent banking, lower fees, and a way to bypass dollar rails for transactions where neither side wants the friction.
Western reaction was cautious. US and European policymakers said they would watch the rollout closely; analysts pointed out that, as a percentage of global flows, the digital yuan is still small — but the slope is what matters.
Whether this is a serious challenger to the dollar or a useful regional sidecar is the debate of the year. Either way, the days when "RMB internationalization" was a Power-Point bullet are over.