Regulation & Policy
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China’s central bank has issued its strongest warning this year against digital assets, highlighting a renewed nationwide crackdown as trading activity quietly resurfaces despite a years-long ban.
The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) said it would intensify efforts to curb illegal financial activity tied to virtual currencies, with a particular focus on stablecoins.
The announcement followed an inter-agency meeting in Beijing, where the PBOC and a dozen other regulators reviewed recent market patterns and concluded that cryptocurrency speculation, formally outlawed in 2021, has begun to reappear through underground channels and overseas platforms.
In a statement released after the meeting, the central bank reiterated that digital tokens “do not hold the legal status of fiat currency” and cannot be used as money in China. Authorities said virtual-asset activities remain illegal and emphasized that stablecoins, in particular, pose heightened financial-crime and compliance risks.
According to the PBOC, stablecoins still fail to meet China’s strict standards for customer identification and anti-money-laundering (AML) controls. Officials warned that these tokens are increasingly being used for illicit cross-border fund transfers, fraud schemes, and other unauthorized financial operations.
Regulators pledged to expand monitoring systems and deepen cooperation across agencies to track activity more effectively, including enhanced data sharing and tighter supervision of financial intermediaries suspected of facilitating crypto transactions.
China has maintained a sweeping ban on crypto trading and mining since 2021, arguing that the sector threatens financial stability, encourages capital flight, and fuels criminal activity. But recent research suggests that enforcement gaps persist.
Industry estimates show that China once again ranks among the world’s top Bitcoin-mining jurisdictions, with roughly 14% of global hash rate concentrated in the country as of October. Analysts attribute the resurgence to individual miners and companies operating discreetly in regions with abundant, low-cost electricity and rapidly expanding data-center infrastructure.
The central bank did not address mining activity directly in its latest remarks, though earlier statements from senior officials, including PBOC Governor Pan Gongsheng, have stressed that the government will continue to suppress both mining operations and any form of domestic crypto speculation.
The mainland’s renewed pressure contrasts sharply with Hong Kong, which launched a regulatory framework for stablecoin issuers earlier this year as part of its push to position itself as a digital-asset hub. However, progress there has stalled, with no licences awarded so far.
Several companies have reportedly paused stablecoin plans following concerns raised by mainland authorities.
China’s latest message leaves little room for ambiguity: while global regulators debate how to integrate digital assets into their financial systems, Beijing remains committed to keeping virtual currencies outside its borders and out of its banking system.
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