
In a landmark move that could reshape how Africa trades with China, Standard Bank has become the first African bank to integrate directly with China’s Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS). The integration gives African businesses a direct route to pay Chinese suppliers in yuan bypassing the traditional detour through U.S. dollar-based settlement.
The change was officially enabled after Standard Bank secured its licence earlier this year and completed technical integration across its network. For firms importing goods from China from electronics to raw materials the new option eases a common pain point: costly dollar conversions, unpredictable exchange-rate swings, and delays inherent in multi-currency settlement.
Under the new system, businesses won’t have to settle invoices in dollars and wait for lengthy clearing processes. Instead, payments can be settled directly in yuan via CIPS, with near-real-time clearing an improvement that could reduce transaction costs, speed up cash flow, and provide more predictable pricing for trade.
This isn’t just a financial convenience. It’s a signal that the long-standing dominance of the U.S. dollar in Africa-China commerce may be shifting. As more African institutions beyond Standard Bank adopt systems like CIPS, we could see a broader trend: trade settling increasingly in yuan, enabling collateral trade-finance flows in non-dollar currencies, which may offer African companies more stability, especially when dollar liquidity is tight or the exchange rate is volatile.
For Chinese exporters, the move could accelerate the pace and volume of business with African partners, as payments become smoother and currency conversion friction drops. For African importers, it could ease working capital constraints and make supply chains more predictable.
The integration positions Standard Bank as a regional leader for cross-border trade finance and may give it a competitive edge among African corporates doing business with Asia. Other African banks are likely watching closely if this implementation delivers on cost, speed, and reliability, they may follow suit.
In broader terms, the integration reflects shifting global dynamics in trade finance and cross-border payments. As China continues pushing for wider international use of its currency, initiatives like CIPS become tools of influence and economic realignment. Africa, with growing trade links with China, sits at the heart of that shift.
Standard Bank’s move could well mark the beginning of a new chapter in Africa–China commerce one where transactions are faster, costs lower, and dollar dependence is slowly eroded.
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