The Manila Times

Chinese investors hit by bitcoin crackdown

- AFP

BEIJING: Beijing’s decision to shut down bitcoin trading platforms has left investors scrambling to cut their losses and threatens to deprive the crypto-currency of a crucial market.

“The authoritie­s don’t understand anything about bitcoin!” fumed Zhang Yanhua, founder of an investment fund that was dead on arrival after Beijing started tightening the screws at the start of the month.

In mid-September the central bank, the People’s Bank of China, told virtual currency trading platforms based in Beijing and Shanghai to cease market operations.

The bank has focused its sights not just on bitcoin but also ethereum and any other electronic units that are exchanged online without being regulated by any country.

They include two Chinese platforms, Okcoin and BTC China, which accounted for 22 percent of the global volume of bitcoins at the end of August.

The bank’s warning shot has shaken world prices and put a damper on the active community of local investors.

“The chances of a reversal are minimal,” said Zhang Yanhua, who has been scrambling to

Three months ago the 50-yearold had set up a small investment fund dedicated to crypto-currencies, which met a premature end.

To acquire virtual currencies, “investment channels (in yuan) are becoming scarcer” and access to platforms using foreign currencies “will become too complicate­d”, Zhang told Agence France-Presse.

Others are seeking an alternativ­e way out: private over- thecounter transactio­ns between individual­s are taking off on messaging applicatio­ns. But Zhang said that was “too risky.” For his part, Sun Minjie, an investor who says he bought more than $150,000 worth of bitcoins, intends to hold on to them for the long term.

“I expect nothing from the government . . . but the fate of bitcoin does not depend on the Chinese authoritie­s.”

Why has this hardening attitude towards bitcoin come about?

In mid-September, the National Internet Finance Associatio­n of China—an offshoot of the central bank—drew up a damning indictment against virtual currencies, accusing them of being “increasing­ly used as a tool in criminal

Bitcoin has also lured many ordinary Chinese attracted by the incredible surge in prices, a popularity that has generated “pyramid Dong Ximiao, an economist at Peking University.

But the central bank, which at the start of September banned companies from issuing electronic currency units to raise funds, around the crypto- currencies, which “seriously disrupted the

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