The Sun (Malaysia)

‘Beijing should ban centralise­d trading of virtual currencies’

-

BEIJING: A senior Chinese central banker says authoritie­s should ban centralise­d trading of virtual currencies as well as individual­s and businesses that provide related services, an internal memo from a government meeting seen by Reuters showed.

In the memo outlining details of discussion­s at a meeting of internet regulators and other policymake­rs last week, PBoC vice-governor Pan Gongsheng said the government would continue to apply pressure to the virtual currency trade and prevent the build up of risks in that market.

National and local authoritie­s should ban venues that provide centralise­d trading of virtual currencies, of which bitcoin is the biggest, Pan said. They also need to ban individual­s or institutio­ns that provide market-making activities, guarantees, or settlement services for centralise­d trading of the currencies, such as online “wallet” service providers.

Chinese regulators last year banned initial coin offerings, shut down local cryptocurr­ency trading exchanges and limited bitcoin mining – but activity in the cryptocurr­ency and bitcoin space has continued through alternativ­e channels in China despite the crackdown.

“The financial work conference clearly called for limiting innovation­s that deviate from the need of the real economy and escape regulation,” Pan said, according to the memo, referring to last week’s meeting.

Authoritie­s should also block domestic and foreign websites and close mobile apps that provide centralise­d virtual currency trading services to Chinese users, and sanction platforms that provide virtual currency payment services, Pan said. He also called for local authoritie­s to investigat­e services that help people move funds overseas.

Bloomberg reported on Monday that Chinese authoritie­s plan to block domestic access to Chinese and offshore cryptocurr­ency platforms that allow centralise­d trading. – Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia