China has authorized Standard Bank Group Ltd. and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) to establish a Renminbi clearing network spanning 19 African countries, expanding Beijing’s efforts to embed the Yuan more deeply into one of its fastest-growing trading relationships.
The approval from the People’s Bank of China gives businesses and financial institutions across much of Africa direct access to China’s domestic financial infrastructure allowing cross-border transactions to be settled in Renminbi without relying on intermediary currencies such as the U.S. dollar. The two lenders will jointly operate as the Renminbi Clearing Bank of Africa, marking the continent’s largest coordinated Yuan-clearing initiative to date.
The move reflects Beijing’s broader campaign to internationalize the Yuan as geopolitical tensions and shifting trade patterns encourage emerging markets to diversify payment channels. While the U.S. dollar remains the dominant global settlement currency, China has steadily expanded alternative infrastructure through its Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS), bilateral currency swap agreements, and offshore Yuan clearing centers.
Africa has become an increasingly important test case for that strategy.
China remains the continent’s largest trading partner with bilateral trade rising nearly 18% last year, according to Chinese customs data. Beijing has also eliminated tariffs on imports from 53 African countries, strengthening commercial ties and increasing demand for direct Renminbi settlement.
For Standard Bank, Africa’s largest lender by assets, the approval builds on its admission to CIPS in late 2025. The bank said it processed roughly $500 million in Yuan transactions during its first four months on the network driven primarily by trade finance.
The expansion comes as African businesses increasingly pivot toward Asian suppliers.
Standard Bank’s latest Africa Trade Barometer found that 35% of companies across ten African markets now identify Asia as their preferred trading partner, up from 24% a year earlier, with China cited as the leading source of imports by most respondents.
While the new clearing arrangement is unlikely to challenge the dollar’s dominance in global finance in the near term, it lowers transaction costs, shortens settlement times, and provides African companies with greater access to Chinese capital markets. It also reinforces China’s long-term objective of making the Yuan a more widely used trade and reserve currency across emerging markets, particularly within regions where Beijing has become a dominant investor and infrastructure partner.
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