The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Bitcoin slides as China central bank launches checks on exchanges

-

BEIJING. — China’s central bank launched spot checks on leading bitcoin exchanges in Beijing and Shanghai, ratcheting up pressure on potential capital outflows and knocking the price of the cryptocurr­ency down more than 12 percent against the dollar.

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) said its probe of bitcoin exchanges BTCC, Huobi and OKCoin was to look into a range of possible rule violations, including market manipulati­on, money laundering and unauthoris­ed financing. It did not say if any violations had been found.

Chinese authoritie­s have stepped up efforts to stem capital outflows and relieve pressure on the Yuan.

While the Yuan lost more than 6,5 percent against the dollar last year, its worst performanc­e since 1994, the bitcoin price has soared to near-record highs.

That, and the relative anonymity the digital currency affords, has prompted some to believe bitcoin has become an attractive option for tech-savvy Chinese to hedge against the Yuan and skirt around rules limiting how much foreign exchange individual­s can buy each year.

The PBOC in Beijing, where officers visited the offices of OKCoin and Huobi yesterday, said in a statement that “spot checks were focused on how the exchanges implement policies including forex management and anti-money laundering”.

Separately in Shanghai, the PBOC said it visited BTCC, noting its checks “focused on whether the firm was operating out of its business scope, whether it was launching unauthoris­ed financing, payment, forex business or other related businesses, whether it was involved in market manipulati­on, anti-money laundering or (carried) fund security risks.”

On the Europe-based Bitstamp exchange, the price of bitcoin BTC=BTSP fell as much as 12,5 percent to a 3-week low of $800.

On China’s Huobi exchange, the price slid more than 16 percent to 5,313 yuan CNY=CFXS, equivalent to around $766, putting the yuan/bitcoin rate at a discount to the rate on dollar-based exchanges.

Normally, bitcoin trades at a premium in China, with a lack of trading fees encouragin­g volumes and boosting demand.

“Selling is being driven by China. The fear is that . . . this investigat­ion could lead to, worse-case scenario, funds being withheld from them (Chinese investors) or one of the exchanges being found to have acted improperly,” said Charles Hayter, CEO of digital currency analytics firm Cryptocomp­are.

“This is a ratcheting up of the rhetoric from the Chinese authoritie­s — instead of ‘we’re watching’ you, it’s now ‘we’re investigat­ing’ you,” he said. Last week, PBOC officials met with the three exchanges, and the central bank publicly urged investors to take a rational and cautious approach to investing in bitcoin. — Reuters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe