Chinese state media signals tighter crypto regulations in Terra aftermath

The China state-owned media outlet, the Economic Daily, has signaled that the Chinese government may introduce even tighter regulations on cryptocurrencies and stablecoins due to the collapse of the Terra ecosystem.

In an article published May 31, the outlet detailed the collapse of TerraUSD (UST) and Luna (LUNA), explaining the workings of the algorithmic stablecoin. It used the so-called black swan event to praise the Chinese governmentโ€™s decision to ban cryptocurrency.

โ€œMy country has been cracking down on virtual currency trading speculation and a large number of trading platforms,โ€ reporter Li Hualin wrote before adding, โ€œthis has effectively blocked the transmission of this risk in China and avoided investment risks to the greatest extent possible.โ€

Hualin explained that โ€œmany other countriesโ€ are looking to regulate stablecoins following the Terra collapse and quoted Zhou Maohua, a researcher at the China Everbright Bank, to make a case for further restrictions within China:

โ€œIn the future, our country will also speed up the completion of regulatory shortcomings, and introduce targeted regulatory measures for the risk of stablecoins to further reduce the space for virtual currency speculation, illegal financial activities and related illegal and criminal activities, and better protect the safety of the people.โ€

After banning crypto exchanges back in 2017, the Chinese government has been toughening its stance on crypto again since mid-2021. Multiple agencies warned of the risk of investing in crypto, and a major crackdown on mining within the country took place.

Colin Wu, a China-focused cryptocurrency reporter, cleared up the misconception around the ban, telling Cryptox that the laws donโ€™t allow institutions to provide crypto services โ€œbut they donโ€™t prohibit ordinary people from using cryptocurrencies โ€” there is no clear law to prohibit it,โ€ adding:

โ€œInstitutions and enterprises are completely banned from trading or owning cryptocurrency in China, but individuals are free to own, buy and sell, and some local courts even consider them to be legally protected as virtual property.โ€

Earlier in May, a Shanghai court found that Bitcoin (BTC) is subject to property rights, laws and regulations as its value, scarcity and disposability meet the definition of virtual property according to the court.

As for how traders obtain crypto in the first place, Cryptox previously highlighted the risingย use of VPNs among Chinese traders.ย Following the last round of restrictions, traders began increasingly using offshore exchanges or peer-to-peer (P2P) platforms for all of their activities.

Related: City of Shenzhen airdrops 30M in free digital yuan to stimulate consumer spending

Wu says there is a โ€œgreat possibilityโ€ that the Chinese government would impose even tighter restrictions or even complete bans on stablecoins to prohibit ownership, transfer, purchase and sale of the assets, โ€œespecially for Tether,โ€ he added.

But, China may not stop at its own borders, as the Chinese Communist Party-owned outlet said that regulators in other countries should โ€œstrive to formulate global general rulesโ€ to tighten scrutiny on cross-border payments.

The Beijing regime outlet concluded that the move will โ€œprevent virtual currency from becoming a tool for money laundering, fraud, and illegal fundraising.โ€

CryptoX Portal

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