In a landmark advancement for African financial autonomy, Standard Bank has become the first institution on the continent to directly integrate with China’s Cross Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS). This move enables seamless trade settlement in Chinese renminbi between African and Chinese entities, removing the historical dependency on the US dollar as an intermediary currency.
CIPS, which was launched by the People’s Bank of China in 2015, is a global payment infrastructure that facilitates real-time renminbi transactions across borders. Unlike the SWIFT system, which acts as a messaging platform requiring separate clearing mechanisms often dominated by Western financial institutions, CIPS offers both messaging and settlement. It has now become a crucial pillar in China’s effort to internationalise the renminbi, connecting more than 1500 financial institutions across over 100 countries, and handling in excess of 130 trillion yuan in transactions annually by mid 2025.
For African economies, the implications of this integration are deeply structural. At a practical level, the ability to transact directly in renminbi eliminates the need for double currency conversions, such as from local currency to US dollars and then into renminbi. This shift can reduce transaction and hedging costs by up to five per cent annually, a significant figure in an environment where many African currencies have experienced double-digit depreciation against the dollar. In real terms, African businesses—especially the small and medium enterprises that constitute over 90 per cent of the continent’s formal private sector—stand to benefit from lower trade costs, faster settlement times and reduced exposure to currency volatility.
Standard Bank’s integration is made possible by its longstanding relationship with Chinese financial institutions. The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), which holds a 19.7 per cent stake in Standard Bank, has played a central role in enabling technological compatibility and regulatory alignment. This collaboration is part of a wider joint venture framework established in 2007, which has supported energy, mining, infrastructure and digital banking projects across Southern, Eastern and Western Africa.
The scale of Africa’s trade with China underscores why such financial innovation is more than symbolic. Bilateral trade has surged from under 100 billion yuan in 2000 to more than 2.1 trillion yuan in 2025, according to the Global Times. In the first eight months of the year, trade grew by 16.6 per cent year-on-year, outpacing China’s global average. With China serving as Africa’s largest trading partner—accounting for nearly a fifth of all imports and exports—this evolution in payment systems marks a logical and strategic step forward.
Beyond cost savings, the move promises to simplify and accelerate trade settlement. Previously, payment cycles for African exporters dealing with Chinese buyers could extend over several days due to the time taken for dollar conversions and SWIFT-based communication delays. Through CIPS, settlements can occur within hours. This speed offers meaningful working capital advantages to exporters of perishable agricultural goods or high-demand minerals, sectors where timing can directly affect margins and competitiveness.
In South Africa alone, exports to China reached 15 billion US dollars in 2024, predominantly in raw materials such as iron ore, manganese, and agricultural produce. The ability to settle such high-volume trade in renminbi directly not only reduces costs but also enhances financial predictability. This is critical for long-term contract negotiation, investment planning, and managing commodity price volatility.
Nonetheless, the road to widespread adoption remains nuanced. While renminbi now accounts for roughly 10 per cent of Africa to China trade settlements—up from under one per cent a decade ago—liquidity constraints in African financial markets, coupled with regulatory silos and limited public understanding, may limit immediate uptake. Moreover, national regulators will need to expand frameworks for managing renminbi reserves and develop monetary tools to ensure local financial institutions can effectively interact with CIPS infrastructure.
Even so, Standard Bank’s entry creates a potential ripple effect across the continent’s 54 economies. Financial institutions such as Absa, Ecobank, and Nigeria’s Zenith Bank may consider similar integrations, particularly as African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) policies seek to harmonise cross-border financial flows and reduce friction in intra-African and international commerce.
This development also adds a layer of resilience to African trade networks amidst intensifying global political and financial tensions. Recent US sanctions targeting select Chinese firms have introduced uncertainty for businesses reliant on dollar-settled trade. By diversifying into yuan-denominated systems, African economies are not severing links with traditional partners but expanding the toolkit with which they navigate an increasingly complex geopolitical landscape.
It is important to resist oversimplified narratives that frame this transition as an act of alignment with China against the West. Rather, the CIPS linkage represents an assertion of African financial pragmatism—an effort to engage on more equitable terms with global markets and to build systems that reflect the continent’s diversified partnerships and multi-polar aspirations.
Africa’s participation in the global financial system has often been constrained by inherited infrastructures that reflect colonial legacies and global imbalances. Moves such as Standard Bank’s show that African institutions are no longer passive actors but are actively reshaping financial architecture in ways that better serve local and continental priorities. Whether through digital finance, alternative settlement systems, or public-private trade facilitation, these decisions carry the potential to humanise and localise economic development.
As trade between Africa and China is projected to surpass 300 billion US dollars by 2030, systems like CIPS may become an essential bridge—not just technologically but philosophically—between two rapidly evolving regions. The priority for policymakers and financial leaders now is to ensure that this transformation remains inclusive, transparent, and aligned with Africa’s own long-term development goals.







