China's central bank
launches spot checks on bitcoin exchanges
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[January 11, 2017]
By John Ruwitch and Winni Zhou
SHANGHAI
(Reuters) - China's central bank said on Wednesday it launched spot
checks on major bitcoin exchanges in Beijing and Shanghai, knocking the
price of the cryptocurrency down by more than 6 percent.
The probe of bitcoin exchanges, including BTCC, Huobi and OKCoin, was to
look into a range of possible rule violations, including market
manipulation, money laundering and unauthorized financing, the People's
Bank of China (PBOC) said. It did not say if any violations had been
found.
On the Europe-based Bitstamp exchange, the bitcoin price <BTC=BTSP> fell
as much as 7 percent. By 1030 GMT (5:30 a.m. ET), it traded down around
4 percent. On Huobi's website, the price quoted in yuan <CNY=CFXS> slid
nearly 10 percent before pulling back to trade about 6 percent lower.
Chinese authorities have been ratcheting up efforts to stop capital
outflows and relieve pressure on the yuan to depreciate. The currency
lost more than 6.5 percent against the U.S. dollar last year.
With bitcoin's soaring price and the relative anonymity it affords, some
believe the digital currency has become an attractive option for
tech-savvy Chinese to hedge against the yuan and circumvent rules that
limit the amount of foreign exchange individuals can buy each year.
The Shanghai arm of the PBOC said it visited BTCC on Wednesday.
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"The
checks focused on whether the firm was operating out of its business scope,
whether it was launching unauthorized financing, payment, forex business or
other related businesses, whether it was involved in market manipulation,
anti-money laundering or (carried) fund security risks," it said.
In a separate statement, the PBOC in Beijing, where officers visited the offices
of OKCoin and Huobi, said "the spot checks were focused on how the exchanges
implement policies including forex management and anti-money laundering".
Shanghai-based BTCC's CEO Bobby Lee confirmed the visit, but said he believed
the company was not out of line.
"We're definitely vigilant. We think we are in compliance with all the current
rules and regulations of running a bitcoin exchange in China," he told Reuters
by phone.
"I wouldn't call it an investigation. I think they are working closely with us
to learn more about our business model and the bitcoin exchange industry. We had
a very fruitful meeting today," Lee said.
A Huobi executive who declined to be named confirmed the PBOC visited their
office on Wednesday, but declined to provide details. A spokeswoman for OKCoin
told Reuters its platform was operating normally, and it was working with the
authorities.
Last week, PBOC officials meet with the three exchanges, and the central bank
publicly urged investors to take a rational and cautious approach to investing
in bitcoin.
(Additional reporting by Brenda Goh and Samuel Shen; Editing by Jacqueline Wong
and Ian Geoghegan)
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