By Samuel Shen and Andrew Galbraith
SHANGHAI (Reuters) – Bitcoin’s 300% price surge since October has revived China’s grey market in cryptocurrency trading, putting regulators on alert over financial risks and capital outflows as volatility spikes.
China shut down its local cryptocurrency exchanges in 2017, smothering a speculative market that had accounted for 90% of global bitcoin trading.
Onshore investors now trade bitcoin on platforms owned by Chinese exchanges that have relocated overseas, including Huobi and OKEx. Once-dormant Chinese trading chatrooms on social media have become busier.
“I’ve come to look for investment opportunities,” said Paris Chang, who opened an account last month at cryptocurrency exchange Binance.
Brushing aside worries over the volatility and the recent sell-off, he said: “This market is for the big hearts.”
China-focused cryptocurrency exchanges are not licensed on the mainland, but individuals can easily open accounts and trade online if they upload details of their Chinese identity cards.
Exchanges such as Binance and MXC bar the use of yuan and only allow trading between cryptocurrency pairs, such as bitcoin versus the dollar-linked stablecoin tether (USDT).
But Chinese investors can use peer-to-peer markets to buy USDT using yuan, with payment made via bank cards or online transfers. This process does not violate Chinese laws.
But Chinese individuals appear to be moving capital overseas under official quotas to obtain their USDT, under the guise of making medical or other legitimate purchases, a regulatory source told Reuters. The loophole allows investors to get around China’s strict capital controls.
China’s securities market watchdog told its regional bureaux last week to adopt tighter oversight of cryptocurrency trading, said the source, who has direct knowledge of the matter but is not authorised to speak to the media.
He added that overseas-registered exchanges are outside Beijing’s remit.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) did not respond to an emailed request for comment.
Huang Mengqi, a lawyer at Beijing DHH Law Firm, said regulators’ inability to govern offshore cryptocurrency exchanges could blind them to potential risks.
“You cannot stop people from trading bitcoin, because Chinese law recognises the value of virtual assets. Anything with value should be allowed to change hands,” Huang said.
The absence of data and investor information on those exchanges, however, complicates China’s anti-money laundering efforts and blunts the effectiveness of capital controls, the lawyer said.
In 2020, $17.5 billion worth of digital assets flowed out of Chinese exchanges to foreign venues, 53% more than in the previous year, suggesting a rise in capital flight out of China, consultancy PeckShield said in its anti-money laundering report.
Changhao Jiang, co-founder and CTO of Cobo, a Chinese cryptocurrency custodian and digital wallet provider, saw a jump in business this year.
“China remains a very big market for cryptocurrencies,” said Jiang, whose firm’s mission is to “make it easy to own and use cryptocurrencies.”
(Editing by Vidya Ranganathan and Jacqueline Wong)