Tether – which is also known as USDT – is pegged to the US dollar, making the virtual currency less volatile than others.
In Cambodia, Tether coin becomes crypto of choice for Chinese-linked activities
In Cambodia, Tether coin becomes crypto of choice for Chinese-linked activities
The SPP and SAFE said their local branches should improve coordination to “punish fraudulent foreign exchange purchases, illegal foreign exchange transactions and other foreign exchange-related illegal and criminal activities lawfully and handle every case efficiently to effectively prevent and resolve financial risks and maintain national financial security”.
The statement said converting yuan to cryptocurrency – and thereby converting it to foreign currencies – or the other way round was illegal in China. Those not directly involved in such transactions but who knowingly provide technical support, including building and maintaining a website, would be seen as “accomplices”.
A “heavy-handed crackdown” on illegal cross-border financial activities would continue, the forex regulator said.
The prosecutor’s office highlighted eight “typical cases of illegal foreign exchange crime” – two of which used the Tether stablecoin as an intermediary – and called for tighter regulation.
It said that in a 2019 case, a crypto trader received more than 22 million UAE dirhams (about US$6 million) in cash from a Chinese gambling syndicate in Dubai and transferred the corresponding yuan into their account in China. The trader – who was jailed for seven years and fined 2.3 million yuan (US$322,000) – was found to have used UAE dirhams to buy Tether stablecoin that they resold in mainland China for yuan, making gains of over 2 per cent.
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Another case involved the conversion of more than 220 million yuan worth of foreign currency using Tether between 2018 and 2021. The statement said the developer and maintainer of several Chinese payment websites used in those transactions had been sentenced to five years’ jail and fined 200,000 yuan but did not give further details of the case.
Underground traders use virtual coins to exchange currencies and avoid regulation. They make money on the difference in value between buying cryptocurrencies with foreign currencies and reselling the virtual assets in yuan. Payments in foreign currencies and yuan are often made in parallel to both overseas and Chinese accounts to avoid a direct, local transaction.
This week, police in the eastern city of Qingdao, in Shandong province, said they had busted a 15.8 billion yuan money laundering case that involved illegal forex trading using cryptocurrencies, and warned against the crime.