Compliance
Compliance Corner: People's Bank Of China Frowns On "Virtual Currencies"

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People’s Bank of China
The mainland China government, which has reportedly reiterated
its strict line on “virtual currencies,” has warned that
speculative trading has increased; it has promised to eliminate
“illegal activities” involving stablecoins.
The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) held a coordination meeting on
virtual currency regulation last Friday, according to the
South China Morning Post.
“Business activities related to virtual currencies constitute
illegal financial activities,” the statement said.
There is a patchwork of regulations around the world. In Hong
Kong, rules in the city licensing stablecoins referenced to fiat
currencies kicked in from 1 August – a move that the Asian city
hopes will help boost its financial centre. Other jurisdictions,
such as the US, have paved the way to enable the use of
stablecoins. In July, President Donald Trump signed the “GENIUS
Act” (Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US
Stablecoins Act), which created a federal regulatory framework
for payment stablecoins.
A stablecoin is a type of cryptocurrency designed to maintain a
stable value by being pegged to a reserve asset, such as a fiat
currency such as the US dollar or a commodity like gold.
On 27 October, in a speech from the PBOC’s governor Pan
Gongsheng, it referred to the digital renminbi currency, or “CNY”
as a channel that will be further developed.
However, Gongsheng was scathing about “the continuous emergence
of various virtual currencies issued by market institutions,
stablecoins in particular.”
“The prevalent view is that, as a form of financial activity,
stablecoins at present cannot duly meet the basic requirements
for client identification and anti-money laundering, so that they
have amplified the loopholes in global financial regulation, such
as those associated with money laundering, illicit cross-border
fund transfers, and terrorist financing,” he said. “Amplified by
market speculation, stablecoins have increased vulnerabilities to
the global financial system and are even posing a challenge to
the monetary sovereignty of some less developed economies.”
China imposed a ban on bitcoin “mining” in 2021.
In September, the PBOC opened its international operations centre
for the digital renminbi in Shanghai.