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China Toughen Rules for Virtual Currency Supervision

Thu, 08 Jul 2021
Categories: China Legal Trends

On 18 May 2021, the National Internet Finance Association of China, China Banking Association, and the Payment and Clearing Association of China jointly released the “Announcement on Preventing Speculative Risks in Virtual Currency Trading(the “Announcement”, 關(guān)于防范虛擬貨幣交易炒作風(fēng)險(xiǎn)的公告). Pursuant to the Announcement, the virtual currency is not a legal tender, but a specific virtual commodity, which is not issued by monetary authorities, not recognized by law as a means to settle any debt, has no mandatory acceptance or other attributes of currency, and thus shall not and can not be used as a legal tender in the market.

In accordance with the Announcement, members such as financial institutions and payment institutions shall practice with enhanced social responsibilities, and are prohibited from using any virtual currency for product or service pricing, underwriting any virtual currency-related insurance policy, or include any virtual currency in any insurance policy coverage, or directly or indirectly providing customers with any other service related to virtual currencies.

Subsequently, on May 21, the Financial Stability and Development Committee of the State Council in a conference explicitly proposed to crackdown on Bitcoin mining and trading activities. This was the first time that the State Council put forward clear requirements for cracking down on bitcoin mining and trading activities.

 

 

Cover Photo by Kevin Gu (https://unsplash.com/@kevinkoo) on Unsplash

Contributors: CJO Staff Contributors Team

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