Arab Times

Chinese cenbank says all crypto transactio­ns illegal; Bitcoin dips

Digital currencies disrupt financial system: PCB

-

BEIJING, Sept 26, (AP): China’s central bank on Friday declared all transactio­ns involving Bitcoin and other virtual currencies illegal, stepping up a campaign to block use of unofficial digital money.

Friday’s notice complained Bitcoin, Ethereum and other digital currencies disrupt the financial system and are used in money-laundering and other crimes.

“Virtual currency derivative transactio­ns are all illegal financial activities and are strictly prohibited,” the People’s Bank of China said on its website.

The price of Bitcoin fell more than 9%, to $41,085, in the hours after the announceme­nt, as did most other crypto tokens. Ethereum skidded almost 10%, falling from $3,100 to around $2,800.

Chinese banks were banned from handling cryptocurr­encies in 2013, but the government issued a reminder this year. That reflected official concern cryptocurr­ency mining and trading might still be going on or the state-run financial system might be indirectly exposed to risks.

Promoters of cryptocurr­encies say they allow anonymity and flexibilit­y, but Chinese regulators worry they might weaken the ruling Communist Party’s control over the financial system and say they might help to conceal criminal activity.

The People’s Bank of China is developing an electronic version of the country’s yuan for cashless transactio­ns that can be tracked and controlled by Beijing.

Regulators in other countries have increasing­ly warned that cryptocurr­encies need greater oversight. In the U.S., Gary Gensler, the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, has said that investors need more protection in the cryptocurr­ency market, which he called “rife with fraud, scams and abuse” and compared to the “Wild West.”

The SEC has won dozens of cases against crypto fraudsters, but Gensler says the agency needs Congress to give it more authority and funding to adequately regulate the market.

Regulators in China have also been trying to rein in cryptocurr­ency mining, an energyinte­nsive process whereby specialize­d computers generate digital currencies. As a result, miners have been moving operations out of China.

Two years ago, China alone accounted for around three-quarters of all the electricit­y used for crypto mining, by far the most in the world, according to the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricit­y Consumptio­n index. By April of this year, before the latest crackdown, China’s share had fallen back to 46%. That still towers over the No. 2 country, the United States, at less than 17%.

 ?? ?? A visitor passes by a logo for the e-CNY, a digital version of the Chinese Yuan, displayed during a trade fair in Beijing, China, Sunday, Sept. 5, 2021. China’s central bank on Friday, Sept. 24, 2021, declared all transactio­ns involving Bitcoin and other virtual currencies illegal, stepping up a campaign to block use of unofficial digital money. (AP)
A visitor passes by a logo for the e-CNY, a digital version of the Chinese Yuan, displayed during a trade fair in Beijing, China, Sunday, Sept. 5, 2021. China’s central bank on Friday, Sept. 24, 2021, declared all transactio­ns involving Bitcoin and other virtual currencies illegal, stepping up a campaign to block use of unofficial digital money. (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait