Putin Signs Law Legalizing Cryptocurrency Mining in Russia
Putin wanted "to seize the moment" in creating regulation for digital asset mining.
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Putin wanted "to seize the moment" in creating regulation for digital asset mining.
While Hong Kong residents can sign up for a digital yuan wallet with a phone number, the CBDC is currently restricted to cross-border transactions and cannot be used for person-to-person transfers within Hong Kong.
Some participants of Chinas CBDC pilot program are reportedly hesitant to hold onto the digital yuan, citing a range of concerns with using the state-backed digital currency.
China is promoting the use of its digital yuan, also known as e-CNY, for cross-border trade in its Belt and Road initiative. The city of Xuzhou plans to allow the use of e-CNY to pay for services and storage charges for goods carried by cross-border trains, with plans to extend its usage to pay taxes and utility services in the city. The Hong Kong Monetary Authority is also testing the digital yuan as a cross-border payment tool in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macau Greater Bay Area, while the Chinese government ramps up its CBDC efforts amid a shift away from the U.S. dollar in international trade markets. (Read More)
It might be imagined that the concept of a financial system that cannot be controlled by a central bank would be anathema to China’s ruling party, but decentralisation is not an uncommon feature of Chinese society.
A paper published in the China Economic Review in 2020 referred to that country’s unique blend of political centralisation and decentralisation of economic power and responsibility, noting that even after the centralising reforms in the last three decades, the fiscal system is largely decentralised.
For a certain subset of cryptocurrency users, decentralised finance is filling the gap for cryptocurrency services in China, although there is a major limitation in the shape of the efficiency and liquidity of centralised exchanges.
So while volumes at decentralised exchanges continue to increase, especially in the wake of major centralised finance exchange collapses, Zennon Kapron, the Managing Director of Asian fintech strategic consulting firm Kapronasia, stated there are no decentralised exchanges that can match the liquidity and depth of trading that centralised exchanges provide, and nor will they in the near future.
Angel Zhong, a senior lecturer in finance at RMIT School of Economics and a trading trends expert, agrees that decentralised finance is to at least some extent filling the gap left by China’s crackdown on centralised cryptocurrency exchanges.
Switzerland's biggest bank, UBS, has agreed to buy its rival Credit Suisse in an emergency rescue deal aimed at stemming financial market panic. Hear what RMIT financial expert @AngelZhong17has to say about the merge and its effects. https://t.co/YBr0Bj32lH
— RMIT University (@RMIT) March 21, 2023“However, it is important to note that the Chinese government's regulations may also extend to DeFi activities,” she added. “It has been monitoring DeFi projects and activities within China and the regulatory landscape is rapidly evolving.”
Users of DeFi platforms often resist the implementation of KYC standards, citing privacy concerns. The lack of KYC protocols in DeFi raises the risk of non-compliance with anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CTF) obligations.
“There is scope for regulation in China, in particular with a strong focus on developing responsibilities about KYC,” Zhong mentioned. “China could also use its firewall to ban access to DeFi wallets.”
The ability to regulate crypto has always been in the on- and off-ramps, namely the banks and payment providers. China has approached this in a few different ways in the past, from encouraging banks to avoid doing business with crypto exchanges to completely banning them from doing so.
“The challenge with DeFi is of course the fact that there may not be any ramps for the regulators to regulate,” Kapron explained. “With no traditional fiat rails and an often amorphous and complex structure, DeFi exchanges might be the toughest challenge yet for the Chinese government and regulators.”
The Shanghai government’s investment in the blockchain firm, Conflux was seen by many as an attempt to build its own version of DeFi. Conflux Network's Co-Founder, YuanJie Zhang, noted that DeFi teams in China either maintain a relatively low profile or rebrand themselves as headquartered in Singapore or Hong Kong.
“Their founders mostly live overseas and handle investors, partnership and listing preparations, while their coders work remotely (and anonymously) in second tier cities,” he said. “Chinese crypto players trust mainstream DeFi rather than Chinese-founded DeFi protocols given the risk of rug pulls and hacks – although Hong Kong’s crypto policy may change the dynamics.”
In a keynote speech at the Hong Kong Web3 festival in mid-April, Keith Choy, the interim Head of Intermediaries at the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) of Hong Kong noted that decentralised finance (DeFi) presented a number of regulatory issues.
He referred to financial stability implications arising from the interconnectedness of DeFi and virtual asset ecosystems, as well as between DeFi and the traditional financial world, and the limited transparency of these interconnections. Choy also touched on DeFi’s vulnerability to market integrity issues, such as price oracle manipulation or front-running transactions.
Then, there is the issue of who should be held accountable when things go wrong. The SFC’s view is that as long as a DeFi activity falls within the scope of the securities and futures ordinance, it would be subject to the same regulatory requirements as a traditional financial activity.
1) China is more engaged with crypto than you may think. It's home to 30,000 registered blockchain companies and holds 84% of global blockchain patents. ??
— Dimitri Roumeliotis (@defiDimitri) June 17, 2023Choy suggested that identifying the individuals who should be held accountable in DeFi may not be as difficult as imagined since some DeFi protocols can be controlled by a relatively small group of developers, operators or related parties. But, Zhang is less optimistic, suggesting that Hong Kong’s regulators will focus on regulated exchanges, stablecoins, and then crypto wallets. “The decentralised space takes more time to discuss and develop a framework for regulation,” he declared.
Zhang also downplays the likelihood of the Chinese government building its own decentralised finance network given the lack of consensus on infrastructure. “Many participants, policy makers and corporates are still in the consortium phase,” he added. “Conflux is the sole public chain admitted by the government in a different track, and Hong Kong will be an experiment where the DeFi ecosystem operates at arm's length to the Ethereum virtual machine (a core piece of Ethereum that helps power the blockchain and smart contracts) ecosystem.”
Others take a different view though, with Kapron suggesting the development of China's central bank digital currency (the e-CNY) could theoretically provide the rails for a government-sponsored DeFi ecosystem with clear Chinese characteristics. “In other words, it may be decentralised, but also have clear opportunities for the government to monitor and potentially control transactions on the platform,” Zhang stated.
A senior figure at a DeFi platform liquidity network suggested that something resembling a decentralised network could be rolled out over the next decade with some sort of automation layer using permissioned smart contracts, adding that China is very good at identifying the valuable parts of technology and applying it to its own rules, as evidenced by the e-CNY.
“With the rapid development and substantial growth in DeFi around the world – as well as the challenging nature of regulating and policing DeFi projects – it is becoming increasingly likely that the Chinese government takes part in DeFi, similar to how it joined the game of central bank digital currency,” concluded Zhong.
This article was written by Paul Golden at www.financemagnates.com.
Multiple Chinese city governments have given away millions worth of e-CNY to try to promote consumption around the holiday season.
A traditional Chinese way of gifting money that’s gone virtual with the rise of digital payments has been introduced into the digital yuan wallet app.
China's PBoC Governor Yi Gang has reassured that the country's Digital Yuan will prioritize privacy protection (Read More)
The Chinese Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) also known as the e-CNY has hit close to $14 billion (100.04 billion Yuan) from 360 million transactions as it gains widespread acceptance in country (Read More)
In China, the Digital Currency Research Institute of the People's Bank of China has launched a digital renminbi smart contract prepaid fund management product - "Yuanguanjia". (Read More)
China has made yet another giant stride toward the virtual payment space. Emerging reports from local media reveal that the country has begun the second [...]
China's Guangzhou became the first city to launch a pilot function of a digital RMB payment code to pay for bus rides. (Read More)
After years of the devastating Covid-19 lockdowns and the recent recurrences of the pandemic in parts of China, the city of Shenzhen is looking to revitalize its battered economy. To achieve this, officials are looking to spur consumption through a Crypto airdrop. According to the Shanghai security news, there is […]
The use of China’s Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) is currently being boosted by the city of Shenzhen which according to reports has airdropped 30 million Digital Yuan (e-CNY) to its residents. (Read More)
In Hong Kong, the local financial regulator has issued a discussion paper to the public, asking for the public opinions about introducing domestic retail central bank digital currency. (Read More)
Bitcoin as a peer-to-peer financial system and its ideology of financial freedom make a stronger case than the claims of other cryptocurrencies.
Senator Pat Toomey, a senior member of the U.S. Senate Banking Committee, urges the Treasury and State Departments closely examine Beijing’s CBDC rollout during the Olympic Games. (Read More)
China’s CBDC is growing at a fast pace as data released official from the PBOC financial markets department revealed the new legal tender has inked a total of 87.57 billion yuan ($13.68 billion) in transactions since public trials began.
(Read More)
WeChat has become compatible with payments using the digital yuan ahead of the Beijing Winter Olympics, owner Tencent Holdings said. (Read More)
Macau is expected to be a testbed for China's digital yuan, also known as the e-CNY, as casino operators prepare to bid for new licenses in the city for the first time in two decades. (Read More)
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