Asia's cryptocurrency arbitrage boom fizzles, but
profits persist
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[April 03, 2018]
By Winni Zhou and Andrew Galbraith
SHANGHAI/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - When China
closed its local cryptocurrency exchanges late last year, an underground
ecosystem of bitcoin "mules" and peer-to-peer platforms sprung up to
allow bitcoin trading to thrive, away from regulators' watchful eyes.
Li, a Canada-based Chinese banker in his 20s, is one of these
underground traders. He buys cryptocurrencies in other markets and sells
them at a premium to investors in China, who cannot otherwise get them.
At the height of the frenzied demand for bitcoins in January, when
prices of the digital currency were hovering close to $20,000 after a
20-fold jump during 2017, Li and other traders were able to sell
bitcoins in China for 30 to 40 percent more than they cost elsewhere.
But in a matter of months, the premium for bitcoins in China has fallen
to around 7 percent or less as a flood of bitcoin mules, who physically
carry cash across borders for the trades, has swamped the arbitrage
business. Cryptocurrency funds and individual computer-assisted traders
have also piled into the market.
The boom has eaten away the spreads and shown how fast the galloping
cryptocurrency markets can change course.
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"The market's kind of taken a downturn; there is less general appetite
in this space," said John DeCleene, an assistant fund manager running
the fintech and cryptocurrency investments at Overseas Chinese
Investment Management.
"It is too many players entering this market, but also less of the hype
we saw in December-January, when people were paying a 30 percent premium
because they expected 10 times gains overnight."
DeCleene launched a $5 million Singapore-based global fund in November
to invest in cryptocurrencies, blockchain-related equities and some
exploratory arbitrage trading. He said it has generated a 58 percent
return so far.
BITCOIN MULES
Bitcoin arbitrage thrived last year as the cryptocurrency grew more
volatile and some governments stepped in with rules to curtail trading.
The simplest geographical arbitrage involved buying bitcoin in
unregulated markets such as Thailand, or ones that have legalised
bitcoin trading such as Japan, and selling them in banned markets such
as South Korea, China or India.
A second form occurred between exchanges, when nimble-footed traders
bought cryptocurrencies cheaply on lesser-known exchanges and sold them
for a profit on more liquid and widely used platforms.
There were huge price differences to exploit.
In early January, when the price of bitcoin was $17,600 on Bitstamp, the
Luxembourg-based digital currency exchange, it was being quoted at 25
million won ($23,630) in South Korea, implying a 34 percent "kimchi
premium".
As China's ban expanded from an initial prohibition on issuing new
cryptocurrency to a shutdown of exchanges, premiums rose and traders
quickly found new ways of doing business.
At first, it was limited to closed groups on the popular messaging
platform WeChat and meetings at bars, where potential bitcoin buyers
could meet sellers.
Then peer-to-peer platforms such as CoinCola, websites belonging to
former Chinese exchanges Huobi and OKCoin, and even the retail platform
Taobao became hubs for "over-the-counter" (OTC) cryptocurrency trading,
conducted outside of formal exchanges and far more difficult for
regulators to police.
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![](../images/040318pics/busine25.jpg)
A woman using her mobile phone is reflected on an electric board
showing exchange rates of various cryptocurrencies at Bithumb
cryptocurrencies exchange in Seoul, South Korea, January 11, 2018.
REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
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"The big Chinese traders are all using CoinCola or going direct to each
other through other OTC platforms," like WeChat or AliPay, said
Christian Grewell, a professor of business and interactive media arts at
NYU in Shanghai who has lectured extensively on cryptocurrencies and
blockchain technology.
AliPay is China's leading online payment platform.
Another option, bank transfers between buyers and sellers, is "almost
untraceable", Grewell added, as it is difficult to prove that a transfer
is related to a cryptocurrency transaction.
A trader in her 20s in Shanghai said she buys bitcoins in the United
States to sell over the counter in China. On each trip to the U.S., she
illegally carries $30,000 to $40,000 in cash, she added.
"Selling and buying bitcoins on those OTC websites is the same as
shopping on Taobao," said the trader.
BIG COMPETITION
Hedge funds that can execute arbitrage trades quickly and at a fraction
of the cost are squeezing individual traders, said Ramani Ramachandran,
the chief executive of digital exchange Zenprivex.
Peter Kim of KIT Trading, part of Vulpes Investment Management, manages
a $10 million cryptocurrency arbitrage operation.
"In the beginning, when there is 30 percent arbitrage, obviously you can
travel to Thailand, buy bitcoins, send them to China, Japan, Korea and
sell them. That's easy," said Kim, who was formerly an options arbitrage
trader.
"But that opportunity is not going to last very long. And even though it
is not as blatantly there, there are still many ways to profit from it,
especially for someone like me who is used to making 3 basis points on a
trade," he added.
The arbitrage funds operate much like retail traders, buying and selling
cryptocurrencies simultaneously on two different platforms, but on a
much larger scale. That allows them to profit from smaller spreads.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2018/Apr/03/images/ads/current/garagesale_sda.png)
Some retail traders, including Li, have turned to lesser-known
cryptocurrencies such as Tether, which bills itself as being pegged to
the U.S. dollar.
Tether is popular with Chinese seeking to move their cash discreetly
overseas, as it is not volatile. That demand means it trades at a 2.5
percent to 3.5 percent premium in China, although the number was as high
as 10 percent in January.
Li said his arbitrage activity nets him about $18,000 a month on a
trading volume of about half a million dollars.
Although that is a tidy sum, it is far less than what frantic traders
made late last year.
"The easy arbitrage is going to be much less prevalent now than it used
to be," Kim said.
(Reporting and writing by Vidya Ranganathan; Additional reporting by
Cynthia Kim in SEOUL; Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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