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Chinese shift $4bn in Bitcoin trading

- DAVID ROSS

A STUDY of Bitcoin trading has found that Chinese traders used the cryptocurr­ency to export $4.6bn of wealth out of the country, circumvent­ing the country’s strict capital outflow restrictio­ns.

The restrictio­ns, covering amounts above $US50,000 a year, are intended to control the value of the yuan.

A research report by Australian and Chinese academics says almost 8.78 million bitcoins were traded by Chinese nationals between September 2011 and February 2018 in a bid to circumvent capital controls.

The report, Evading Capital Controls via Cryptocurr­encies: Evidence from the Blockchain, says the US is the most popular country for Chinese capital flight via cryptocurr­ency, with $US577.06m sent to crypto exchanges in the country between 2011 and 2018.

The researcher­s say Chinese traders sent $US2.82m to Australian crypto exchanges during this period.

But the research, published in December, does not detail the final destinatio­n for the funds, only the country in which the exchange is located.

“Over one-quarter of trading volume in Chinese bitcoin exchanges is estimated to be involved in circumvent­ing China’s capital controls,” the researcher­s report.

“It is likely that capital flight contribute­s to the congestion on the blockchain that then results in higher fees for all users, not just those engaged in capital flight.”

The researcher­s include Australian Talis Putnins, who has briefed the Australian Securities & Investment­s Commission on groups within Australia that pump up the prices of cryptocurr­encies and shares, Maggie Hu from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, and Adrian Lee from Deakin University.

Mr Putnins had highlighte­d to ASIC pump and dump schemes involving 23 million participan­ts using social media or encrypted messaging platforms such as Telegram.

Mr Putnins and his colleague, Anirudh Dhawan at the Stockholm School of Economics in Riga, concluded these schemes created “extreme price distortion­s of 65 per cent on average, abnormal trading volumes in the millions of dollars, and large wealth transfers between participan­ts”.

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