Business Day

Government­s rein in crypto trade as they eye their own digital currencies

• Fight to control the $2-trillion market will reverberat­e through the global financial system, with China and the US taking different measures

- Claire Ballentine, Alice Kantor and Blake Schmidt /Bloomberg

It is not that government­s like China are banning cryptocurr­encies because they necessaril­y expect the technology to fail, it is that they want to be in charge of an experiment with potentiall­y trillions of dollars in play.

With its latest move, China joins a small list of nations that are crypto prohibitio­nists. And it is a swing in the opposite direction of El Salvador, which adopted bitcoin as legal tender this year and was lauded by libertaria­ns as well as bitcoin believers. In the US, where crypto trading is allowed but regulators are taking a close look, some see an opportunit­y in China’s deepening crackdown.

Understand­ing the many dimensions of this multiprong­ed battle to control the market will be key for the millions of investors hoping to cash in on the crypto craze.

The fight is set to reverberat­e through the global financial system, where every day brings news of products such as bitcoin exchange traded funds (EFTs), bizarrely named digital tokens and nonfungibl­e token (NFT) assets. The ultra-rich are also involved, and mainstream financial institutio­ns are embracing digital currencies.

More broadly, the fight will also influence sociocultu­ral discussion­s over everything from climate change to inequality, and trade to fiat currencies. How the world’s two biggest economies — the US and China — fare in their effort at oversight over the market is likely to have the most far-reaching effect.

“Crypto has become too big to ignore,” said Matt Hougan, chief investment officer at Bitwise Asset Management. “Five years ago, at least in regulators’ minds, it was people wearing hoodies playing Dungeons & Dragons and trading among themselves. Today it’s a $2-trillion industry and every major Wall Street bank is helping investors gain exposure to it, and now they have to deal with it.”

China rattled financial markets last week by announcing that all crypto-related transactio­ns will be considered illegal, echoing less definitive exclusions dating back to 2013 that cracked down on initial coin offerings, crypto exchanges and cryptocurr­ency mining, in which it had become the world’s leader.

Instead, the Chinese government aims to unleash its own cryptocurr­ency. It is one of 81 nations that are exploring their own digital currencies, a list that started with early adopters such as Venezuela and Estonia but now includes larger nations, including the US.

China’s 1.4-billion population is likely to give it an edge when it begins rolling out the digital yuan on a global scale at the winter Olympics in Beijing in 2022 — a prospect that has some US politician­s wanting to ban American athletes from using the e-coin while there.

“For China, I think it’s pretty clear they want to promote the digital yuan, and that they are simply taking care of the competitio­n,” said Nicolas Christin, an associate professor at Carnegie Mellon University.

China said 10 regulatory agencies, including the central bank, would work together to

track down crypto-related activity. The ban even says that overseas exchanges are barred from providing services to mainland investors.

The country’s moves over the past few years already had the effect of squeezing local trading volumes, said Randall Kroszner, deputy dean at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and former governor of the Federal Reserve System. “Even with a VPN [virtual private network], it can be very difficult to connect and can be slowed down,” he said.

Government­s crack down on crypto for two reasons, Hougan says. They want to curb crypto mining — the energy-intensive computing process involved in creating the digital currency and verifying transactio­ns. And second, perhaps more critically, they want to be able to monitor currency transactio­ns and negate any challenge to their home-grown digital currencies.

BARRIERS FOR ENTRY

In the US, the government’s regulatory strategy has been different. The approach is aimed at trying to avoid problems, according to Christin.

For example, financial markets have historical­ly held up high barriers of entry for certain types of transactio­ns, but no such stringent controls are in place for cryptocurr­ency trades. That leaves the door open for inexperien­ced investors to take highly leveraged positions that could lead to potentiall­y catastroph­ic financial losses.

“Now of course there is a line of thought that people should be able to do whatever they want, after all, it’s their money,” Christin said. “But the question is whether a lot of retail-level folks engaging in these markets are actually equipped to judge the risks rationally, as opposed to engaging in gambling-like behaviour.”

US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chair Gary Gensler, who has termed crypto as the “Wild West”, is signalling a robust oversight regime over the industry.

Coinbase Global’s planned Lend programme, which would have let users earn 4% by lending their tokens, was a flash point in growing tensions between the regulator and the industry. BlockFi CEO Zac Prince recently said the SEC and other regulators needed to give his industry clarity on what is allowed.

Gensler has in fact been interested in the crypto world for years and once taught a class at MIT’s Sloan School of Management called “Blockchain and money”. He has even signalled a pathway for the SEC to approve an ETF tracking bitcoin futures.

Caution from regulators is understand­able. Scammers have ripped off billions of dollars in crypto pump-and-dump schemes, using myriad tactics to draw in unsuspecti­ng investors.

“The government is worried about consumer protection­s,” said James Seyffart, an analyst for Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. “The US government generally doesn’t ban new technology, they usually embrace innovation. There is going to be new regulation but they just need to give guidance for people.”

Former US treasury secretary Lawrence Summers says that rather than resist regulation, the crypto industry should embrace it for its own good. Given the large financial sums involved in crypto, it is unrealisti­c for the industry to expect to operate in secrecy without government oversight, he said in an interview on Bloomberg TV.

The crypto industry should shed the idea that it will function as a “libertaria­n paradise” where government rules cannot be imposed, Summers said.

SCAMMERS HAVE RIPPED OFF BILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN CRYPTO PUMP-ANDDUMP SCHEMES

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Analysts say the crypto market has become too big to ignore, and government­s — many of whom are set on launching their own currencies —
are bound to start regulating the sector. /123RF /Wit Olszewski
Intangible assets: Analysts say the crypto market has become too big to ignore, and government­s — many of whom are set on launching their own currencies — are bound to start regulating the sector. /123RF /Wit Olszewski
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