Expert: News of Chinese Banks' Crypto Crackdown Greatly Exaggerated

Published at: June 17, 2020

It was reported last week that thousands of bank accounts belonging to Chinese over-the-counter cryptocurrency traders were recently frozen by law enforcement. The police claimed that this was part of a wider investigation into illegal activities, such as money laundering. Reports noted that these investigations specifically targeted OTC trades using the stablecoin Tether (USDT).

According to Sonny Wang, the head of Longmen Capital Japan, this was merely part of an everyday exercise by Chinese police. 

Wang says that the Chinese police targeted an agent service that buys USDT on behalf of a money laundering group. There were some who participated in this activity through the platform that had no awareness about the purpose of buying USDT. Others apparently contributed as a part-time job. 

It is alleged that such platforms allow criminals to split their dirty money into small pieces for a small fee. 

Chinese law enforcement, no matter how small the office, has the power to close individual bank accounts at their discretion. "So you have to understand that in China your account can be frozen at any time," said Wang. 

"It was surprising for many and became huge news. But for OTC traders in China, it is not unusual and happens frequently. It is just that too many people got their accounts frozen"

Many account holders saw access to their funds returned, once Chinese police had determined the individuals had done nothing wrong.

A clear endorsement? 

As a result of 4000 accounts being frozen, holders asked China's Big Four Banks (the Industrial & Commercial Bank of China, the China Construction Bank, the Agricultural Bank of China, and the Bank of China) whether they are able to purchase cryptocurrencies at all. Their answer, Wang explained, can be seen as an endorsement of crypto trading at a proper OTC market. 

"As long as a funding source is not problematic and the proper route was used they wouldn't freeze their accounts" 

Wang sees this as a positive response, as it endorses crypto trading in a "grey zone" area in China.

In September 2017, the Chinese government banned crypto trading at Chinese exchanges. Since then, Chinese traders continue to buy and sell cryptocurrency using OTC markets.

Tags
Related Posts
Chinese Police Dismantle $14M Crypto Scam
The Chinese authorities dismantled a significant crypto-related scam in Wenzhou. The scheme amassed over 100 million yuan ($14.31 million), which was seized along with a number of luxury cars and villas. According to Toutiao, the gang has been operating since 2019 and primarily sought out victims through Telegram chat groups, including one called “Huobi Global Moving Brick Arbitrage HT Chinese Group Community.” ETH, BTC, and USDT stolen from victims The report states the scammers pretended to be investors who had benefited from an “investment scheme.” The scammers told their victims that all they had to do was send their cryptos …
Bitcoin / July 9, 2020
CoinEx crypto exchange to remove all mainland China users in October
CoinEx cryptocurrency exchange is winding down operations in mainland China to comply with local anti-crypto regulations. The company officially announced on Thursday that it was going to completely retire user accounts verified as mainland China citizens as well as those linked to a mobile phone number from mainland China. The exchange has asked mainland China-based users to withdraw their crypto assets from the platform before Oct. 31, 2021. CoinEx then plans to disable accounts with zero assets starting from Thursday, Sept. 30. “All access will no longer be available to your accounts,” the exchange stated. Despite CoinEx’s aggressive measures to …
Bitcoin / Sept. 30, 2021
Crypto ‘not protected by law,’ rules provincial high court in China
Yet another blow has been dealt to China’s cryptocurrency community, with news of a new high court ruling in the Shandong province that has drawn out the consequences of crypto’s lack of legal status in the country. As the South China Morning Post (SCMP) reported, the case in question was an appeal against a ruling this January by an intermediate court in the city of Jinan. The plaintiff in the case had lost 70,000 yuan (roughly $10,750) by investing in unnamed crypto tokens back in 2017, which friends of his had reportedly endorsed. Following the People’s Bank of China’s doubling …
Regulation / Aug. 23, 2021
Former Official Says China Needs to Reform Crypto Laws
Xiao Gang, former chair of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, said the country is facing a digital economy transformation and needs to embrace the right regulations for the fast growing crypto market. Xiao was speaking at the 19th Pushan Lectures of China Finance 40 Forum, or CF40, which was held online on July 7. The event saw a number of officials discussing the lessons learned from the 30-year development of China's capital market. According to local news reports, Xiao said there was an urgent need to embrace digital reform: “The development of the digital capital market faces the problem of …
Regulation / July 7, 2020
Tether to launch GBPT stablecoin pegged to British pound sterling
Major stablecoin company Tether is expanding its stablecoin offering with a new cryptocurrency pegged to the British pound sterling (GBP). Tether officially announced on Wednesday that its upcoming GBP-pegged stablecoin, GBPT, will launch in early July and will initially be supported by the Ethereum blockchain. GBPT will be a stable digital currency pegged on the 1:1 ratio to the GBPT, aiming to provide a faster and cheaper option for asset transfers. GBPT joins a family of four other fiat currency-pegged Tether (USDT) tokens, including the largest stablecoin by market capitalization, USDT. Other stablecoins include the euro-pegged EURT, the offshore Chinese …
Blockchain / June 22, 2022