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Explainer: What Beijing's new crackdown means for crypto in China

Published 05/19/2021, 03:36 AM
Updated 05/19/2021, 12:41 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A small toy figurine is seen on representations of the Bitcoin virtual currency displayed in front of an image of China's flag in this illustration picture, April 9, 2019. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Chinese regulators have tightened restrictions that ban financial institutions and payment companies from providing services related to cryptocurrencies, marking a fresh crackdown on digital money.

Compared with a previous ban issued in 2017, the new rules greatly expanded the scope of prohibited services, and judged that "virtual currencies are not supported by any real value".

WHAT ARE THE NEW MEASURES?

Three financial industry associations on Tuesday directed their members, which include banks and online payment firms, not to offer any crypto-related services, such as account openings, registration, trading, clearing, settlement and insurance, reiterating the 2017 ban.

But the new ban, which was posted by the People's Bank of China (PBOC), also covers services that were not previously mentioned.

For example, it made clear that institutions must not accept virtual currencies, or use them as a means of payment and settlement. Nor can institutions provide exchange services between cryptocurrencies and the yuan or foreign currencies.

Additionally, institutions were prohibited from providing cryptocurrency saving, trust or pledging services and issuing crypto-related financial products. And virtual currencies must not be used as investment targets by trust and fund products.

Banks and payment companies were also urged to step up monitoring of money flows involved in cryptocurrency trading, and coordinate more closely in identifying such risks.

The directives were made in a joint statement from the National Internet Finance Association of China, the China Banking Association and the Payment and Clearing Association of China.

WHAT WERE EARLIER RULES IN CHINA AGAINST CRYPTOCURRENCIES?

China does not recognise cryptocurrencies as legal tender and the banking system does not accept cryptocurrencies or provide relevant services.

In 2013, the government defined bitcoin as a virtual commodity and said individuals were allowed to freely participate in its online trade.

However, later that year, financial regulators, including the PBOC, banned banks and payment companies from providing bitcoin-related services.

In September 2017, China banned Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs) in a bid to protect investors and curb financial risks.

The ICO rules also banned cryptocurrency trading platforms from converting legal tender into cryptocurrencies and vice versa.

The restrictions prompted most such trading platforms to shut down with many moving offshore.

The ICO rules also barred financial firms and payment companies from providing services for ICOs and cryptocurrencies, including account openings, registration, trading, clearing or liquidation services.

By July 2018, 88 virtual currency trading platforms and 85 ICO platforms had withdrawn from the market, the PBOC said.

WHY HAS CHINA TIGHTENED REGULATION?

The global bitcoin bull run has revived cryptocurrency trading in China.

Tuesday's industry directive warned speculative bitcoin trading had rebounded, infringing "the safety of people's property and disrupting the normal economic and financial order."

Many Chinese investors were now trading on platforms owned by Chinese exchanges that had relocated overseas, including Huobi and OKEx. Meanwhile, China's over-the-counter market for cryptocurrencies has become busy again, while once-dormant trading chartrooms on social media have revived.

China-focused exchanges, which also include Binance and MXC, allow Chinese individuals to open accounts online, a process that takes just a few minutes. They also facilitate peer-to-peer deals in OTC markets that help convert Chinese yuan into cryptocurrencies. Such transactions are made through banks, or online payment channels such as Alipay or WeChat Pay.

Retail investors also buy "computing power" from cryptocurrency miners, who design various investment schemes that promise quick and fat returns.

Meanwhile, cryptocurrencies' potential threat to China's fiat currency, the yuan, has spurred the PBOC to launch its own digital currency.

WHAT'S THE IMPACT OF THE CRACKDOWN?

The fresh crackdown makes it more difficult for individuals to buy cryptocurrencies using various payment channels, and could impact miners' business by making it harder for them to exchange cryptocurrencies for yuan.

But banks and payment companies also face challenges of identifying money flows related to cryptocurrencies.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A small toy figurine is seen on representations of the Bitcoin virtual currency displayed in front of an image of China's flag in this illustration picture, April 9, 2019. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

Winston Ma, NYU Law School adjunct professor and author of the book "the Digital War", said the new rules were designed to completely cut crypto-related transactions out of China's financial systems, and expects the government to roll out new regulations targeting crypto assets.

Hong Kong's Bitcoin Association said in a tweet in response to China's reiterated ban: "For those new to bitcoin, it is customary for the People's Bank of China to ban bitcoin at least once in a bull cycle."

Latest comments

China wants bitcoin miners to mine yuan instead 🇨🇳
China owns 80% of crypto ( blood crypto) . China wants to check the flow of crypto - stop out flow ! Untill china figures out the smart way to use it as weapon against reserve currancy - US dollar .
What will happen to Earth when China, the US, India, Europe, Russia, and Africa, DISCOVER that "climate change" means "life eradication " ??Tic-toc.
Bye bye crypto. Be ready for 90% loss. Will take 10 years to recover previous levels
You surely must detest your own lack of knowledge
The man with a bank balance of 50 cent.... Sounds like. Let me tell you, your comment will not tank the coin down to 50cent... 😂
Some of us still hold the thinking that they somehow could fight back regulations and goverments lol
China know the danger of a hole and being the first out will avoid and leave the bottom to the drunk ones that don't get that party ended...
china is only good at ending its own parties. I pity the chinese
Crypto currency will bounce back stronger
cripto is worthless. doesn't pay taxes. doesn't support people. consumes unnecessary energy emitting lots of CO2
is good for money laundering
This is really messed up 😪
Suicides incoming.RIP to people I never knew.
😂😂😂😂bought just after the tumble
show the proof... how do we know you bought at bottom?
I told you guys... China will crack down on cryptos...
The crack down is awesome! Go Vigina 😎 . Up and down is where it's at. I don't care if btc is 60k 40k or 20k as long as it keeps going up and down that's all that matters. hehe 😁
This is the attitude! 🙌🏽💪🏽 Doesnt’t matter if we in bull of bear mode both can make you money! 😁✌🏽
Haha brought at 30k sold at 35k made 5g in less than 5 mins. You guys are such losers. BTC is no scam, only losers who are full of fear deserve what they get. Go back to working 9 to 5. You need to be fearless to play this game.
such a gracious winner. I'd like to see you when you lose ...all sullen and moody shouting at the pizza delivery guy before going down to your basement again
China protecting their people??? 😅🤣😂now that's funny. I swear the author of this is either a lover of communism or is a sleep at the wheel.
Got to love China. They protect their people.
you speak like you're all losers
it's a better means of making money but now you've all made it worst for everyone engaged in it
good. ban them all. total scam
China ban crypto. And it means we should support it harder LOLLLLL.
China made the right move!
I love these article that say "What you need to know", "what does it mean for...." and explain simplest stuff that even my 3 yo understands.
when bit reach back 15k then u will see whether is customary or not.
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