The Manila Times

SKorea sends bitcoin on a rollercoas­ter ride

- AFP

SEOUL: Bitcoin and other virtual currencies were sent on rollercoas­ter rides in South Korea Thursday as the government said it was planning to ban cryptocurr­ency exchanges, before later backtracki­ng.

Justice Minister Park SangKi said Seoul was preparing a bill to shut down the country’s virtual coin exchanges, sending bitcoin and other virtual unit prices into a tailspin.

“The ministry is preparing legislatio­n that basically bans any transactio­ns based on a virtual currency through the trading floor,” he told journalist­s.

Authoritie­s had “grave concerns” over the craze and were “aiming to close virtual currency exchanges” in the country, he said.

“It has started to resemble gambling and speculatio­n,” Park added, citing the fact that bitcoin prices are higher in South Korea than globally -- the so- called “kimchi premium”.

The hyper- wired South has emerged as a hotbed for cryptocurr­ency trading, accounting for some 20 percent of global bitcoin transactio­ns -- about 10 times the country’s share of the world economy.

A series of measures have failed to curb overheated virtual currency speculatio­n in the country and Park said it would be “devastatin­g if the bubble bursts”.

His remarks sent bitcoin prices plunging 18 percent on South Korean exchange Bithumb, while ethereum slumped 23 percent.

Investors flooded the presidenti­al Blue House website with hundreds of online petitions against the shutdown, which was swiftly reversed.

A shutdown was “one of the measures that have been prepared by the justice ministry”, chief press secretary Yoon YoungChan said in a statement, “but it

Cryptocurr­encies rapidly reversed course, with bitcoin climbing back to trade just 6.5 percent down, and ethereum off 12 percent.

‘ Blind speculatio­n’

A representa­tive of Bithumb, one of around 20 virtual currency exchanges in South Korea, said the company was watching developmen­ts closely.

“We’re closely monitoring government moves. We have nothing further to say at this moment”, she told AFP.

Bithumb was raided by tax authoritie­s on Wednesday who inspected the company’s documents.

On the same day financial authoritie­s inspected six local banks that offered virtual accounts for corporate customers.

Last month Seoul banned its financial firms from dealing in virtual currencies.

Two weeks later, it announced a ban on opening anonymous cryptocurr­ency accounts and a crackdown on money laundering activities using them.

It has also warned most cryptocurr­encies were being traded in South Korea at far higher prices than elsewhere in the world, blaming factors including “blind speculatio­n”.

An official at the Financial Supervisor­y Service, South Korea’s top financial regulator, said closing local exchanges would represent a “very strong measure” against virtual coins and would “effectivel­y suffocate” cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns within the country.

But a cryptocurr­ency analyst said he was “sceptical” that the justice ministry’ proposal would go into force because of strong market resistance.

A Chinese ban on virtual coin transactio­ns in yuan ended up driving many investors undergroun­d, exposing them to greater risks, he said.

US billionair­e inve s t o r Warren Buffet told CNBC on Wednesday the global craze over bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies would meet a “bad ending”.

“In terms of cryptocurr­encies, generally, I can say with almost certainty that they will come to a bad ending,” he said, but added: “When it happens or how or anything else, I don’t know.”

On global exchanges the price of bitcoin surged in 2017 from a low of around $ 750 in early January to a record above $ 19,500 in mid- December before tumbling, according to Bloomberg News. It bought around $ 13,500 in afternoon trade Thursday.

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