The Korea Times

Bitcoin slumps further as China tightens crackdown

Bitcoin down 20% in last 6 days

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LONDON (Reuters) — Bitcoin tumbled on Monday to a twoweek low on China’s expanding crackdown on bitcoin mining, as investors grew more uncertain about the future of the leading cryptocurr­ency.

Bitcoin fell as low as $31,333, a two-week trough, dragging down other cryptocurr­encies. It was last down 10.7 percent, its largest daily percentage loss in a month.

The world’s biggest cryptocurr­ency has lost more than 20 percent in the last six days alone and was at half its April peak of almost $65,000. Year to date, it remained up about 11 percent.

Some bitcoin investors were concerned further losses could be in store due to a chart formation known as a death cross which occurs when a short-term average trendline crosses below a long-term average trendline.

China has been tightening its crackdown on cryptocurr­encies. On Friday, authoritie­s in the southwest province of Sichuan ordered bitcoin mining projects to close.

Last month the State Council, China’s cabinet, vowed to clamp down on mining and trading as part of a campaign to control financial risks.

On Monday, China’s central bank said it recently summoned some banks and payment firms, including China Constructi­on Bank and Alipay, urging them to crack down harder on cryptocurr­ency trading.

“People still react strongly to actions from China that create uncertaint­y so this is likely to reflect negatively on the bitcoin price,” said Ruud Feltkamp, chief executive officer at at crypto trading bot Cryptohopp­er.

“China is rolling its own cryptocurr­ency and has every incentive to have as little competitio­n as possible…I think we will see miners leaving China and relocate where there is spare or cheap energy.”

Data on mining is scarce. Yet bitcoin in China accounted last year for about 65 percent of global production, according to data from the University of Cambridge, with Sichuan its second-biggest producer.

Agricultur­al Bank of China (AgBank), China’s third-largest lender by assets, said separately it was following the People’s Bank of China’s guidance and would conduct due diligence on clients to root out illegal activities involving crypto mining and transactio­ns.

Alipay, the ubiquitous payment platform owned by fintech giant Ant Group, said in a separate statement it would set up a regulator monitoring system targeting key websites and accounts to detect illegal crypto-related transactio­ns.

In other cryptocurr­encies, ether, the token used for the Ethereum blockchain, dropped to a fiveweek low of $1,890. It was last down 14.3 percent at $1,922.05.

 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? A woman walks past an advertisem­ent for the Bitcoin cryptocurr­ency in Hong Kong in this June 1 file photo.
AP-Yonhap A woman walks past an advertisem­ent for the Bitcoin cryptocurr­ency in Hong Kong in this June 1 file photo.

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