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Author Topic: Chinese exchange BTC38 Suspends Trading  (Read 847 times)
Lordoftherigs (OP)
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April 02, 2014, 06:08:43 PM
 #1

Seems like the rumors that china is getting a tighter grip on bitcoin were actually true.

http://www.coindesk.com/btc38-suspends-trading-cites-china-central-bank-guidance/

This is already decreasing the price... any takes on when might the BTC market stabilize again and what will be the bottom price?  

Regards
Pangia
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April 02, 2014, 07:20:48 PM
 #2

The exchanges in China gave Bitcoin the significant rise in price from around $200 to nearly $1200 in a few short weeks. If they start freezing up, we could potentially be returning to the $200 area.

Hopefully all the exchanges will get together and work on something.




BTC38 Suspends Trading, Cites China Central Bank Guidance
Pete Rizzo (@pete_rizzo_) | Published on April 2, 2014 at 16:41 BST | Exchanges, News, Regulation, US & Canada
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china central bank

China-based bitcoin exchange BTC38 announced to its users that its services will be suspended following a shift in policy from the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the nation’s central bank.

The posting seemingly confirms earlier reports that the PBOC would seek to tighten its enforcement of earlier guidance issued in December, thereby blocking its domestic banks from working with digital currency companies.

Further, the release corroborates recent statements by BTC China CEO Bobby Lee, who has suggested that the PBOC has been seeking to implement a “stricter interpretation” of its past ruling.

Informal translations of the notice suggest that BTC38 has confirmed that the rumors are true, as it stated that it received the news from banks and third-party payment providers.

Read the statement:

    “We will strictly comply with the notification provisions of the central bank to suspend the Renminbi recharging service, whereas, the following two services – Renminbi withdraws and the recharging and withdraw of virtual currencies, are still completely normal.”

The comments suggest that trading between digital currencies will continue via BTC38, but that no fiat-to-digital currency conversions will be allowed on the platform.

Past research on BTC38 indicates that the exchange has been active since October, and that the majority of its traffic comes from China, though it does support some US users.
No further details

Following this statement, BTC38 stated that its assets have not been affected by the announcement and that it still has more than 100% of user reserves in an effort to downplay potential concerns about its finances.

Still, the exchange was not able to offer more details. The company stressed in its posting that it did not have any further comment at this time, and did not indicate when further updates would be available.

Read the statement: “We are temporarily unable to reveal more.”
Call for support

The exchange ended its post with a call for the industry to come together amid the uncertainty that has caused the price of bitcoin to deflate in recent weeks.

BTC38 referred to the state of confusion, noting that it has “hurt the industry”, and called on everyone with a stake in the ecosystem to “resist chaos”.

Furthermore, it suggested that it would look to continue to emphasize customer support and focus on the development of the digital currency industry.


 
 
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btcpay86
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April 02, 2014, 07:57:16 PM
 #3

The posting seemingly confirms earlier reports that the PBOC would seek to tighten its enforcement of earlier guidance issued in December, thereby blocking its domestic banks from working with digital currency companies.

Yes, but not  suspends trading. trading is normal.

this rule is for all digital currency companies, they have a little matter.


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amspir
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April 02, 2014, 08:16:21 PM
 #4

What does this mean exactly?

Is the pathway for a Chinese citizen getting Yaun to and from a Chinese BTC exchange going to completely close, or is it just more difficult?
Nagle
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April 02, 2014, 08:22:30 PM
 #5

What does this mean exactly?

Is the pathway for a Chinese citizen getting yuan to and from a Chinese BTC exchange going to completely close, or is it just more difficult?
The whole China runup was because buying Bitcoins with yuan was a cheap, easy, and legal way around China's exchange controls.  The PBOC took away "legal" a while back, and is now clamping down on "easy". "Cheap" will disappear along with those two.
RockHound
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April 02, 2014, 08:35:19 PM
 #6

Interesting how Huobi and BTCChina claim no correspondence from PBOC thus far?

Are they legally "safe" owing to their use of corporate accounts for client RMB deposits?
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