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China’s money laundering crackdown puts crypto investors, USDT traders at risk

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China’s money laundering crackdown puts crypto investors, USDT traders at risk
China is closely monitoring the use of virtual assets in money laundering activities, according to the country’s highest court, in a move that legal experts say could increase the risk of prosecution for trading cryptocurrency on the mainland.

Using virtual assets to transfer or convert criminal proceeds is among a range of money laundering methods that violate China’s criminal law, according to a judicial interpretation published on Monday by the Supreme People’s Court and the main agency responsible for legal prosecution, the Supreme People’s Procuratorate.

The top court’s judicial interpretation increases the legal risks faced by mainland Chinese cryptocurrency investors when making trades, Shao Shiwei, a lawyer at Shanghai-based Mankun Law Firm, wrote in a post on WeChat.
“From now on, it will be more difficult for USDT merchants to operate and for ordinary people to occasionally trade cryptocurrencies because of potentially high legal risks,” Shao wrote, referring to the world’s biggest stablecoin. Tether’s USDT stablecoin is a type of cryptocurrency pegged to the US dollar.
Money laundering related to the use of virtual assets, such as cryptocurrencies, has become an urgent focus in Chinese authorities’ crackdown on financial crimes. Photo: Shutterstock

If ordinary investors happen to receive proceeds from criminal activities during the buying or selling of virtual assets, they could be held as suspects in a money laundering case, according to Shao. Crypto investors on the mainland must be more cautious to avoid inadvertently taking part in money laundering and other illegal activities, she added.

That judicial interpretation was released amid the constant “innovation and upgrade” in money laundering methods, including use of cryptocurrencies and game tokens, that have become more difficult to tackle in today’s internet age, Chen Xueyong, deputy chief judge of the top court’s No 3 Criminal Adjudication Tribunal, said at a press briefing on Monday.
It marked the first time that virtual assets have been explicitly mentioned in an official criminal law interpretation, providing a greater sense of urgency to implementing revisions to the country’s outdated Anti-Money-Laundering (AML) Law.
A proposed AML law amendment, which is expected to be passed next year, is expected to involve a sharpened focus on prosecuting crimes related to the use of cryptocurrencies to transfer assets abroad.
A view of one of the courts inside the Supreme People’s Court of China in Beijing. Photo: AFP
Calling out virtual asset-based money laundering in the judicial interpretation is not only a response to the highly frequent occurrence of such activities, but it is also aimed at courts to guide their determination of related cases, according to Liu Honglin, founder of Mankun law firm, which focuses on issues in the blockchain industry.

The new interpretation, however, does not equate cryptocurrency trading with money laundering, or change mainland China’s cryptocurrency policies in any way, Liu said.

At present, various crypto-related businesses, including cryptocurrency mining and initial coin offerings are banned on the mainland. Beijing, meanwhile, has given Hong Kong the green light to regulate and support the operations of virtual-asset businesses.
Still, investors on the mainland have stayed active in the market and remain important participants in many international cypto exchanges. Chinese cryptocurrency investors made US$1.15 billion in 2023 to rank fourth behind those in the United States, the United Kingdom and Vietnam, according to an international survey published in March by New York-based blockchain research firm Chainalysis.

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Stablecoins are a shaky proposition for your savings. Here’s what to know.

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Stablecoins are a shaky proposition for your savings. Here’s what to know.

Outside the Box

This so-called ‘safer’ cryptocurrency offers some advantages to investors. But can you trust the providers?

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Stablecoin, the purportedly “safer” version of cryptocurrency, is having its moment. On the heels of the GENIUS Act, which Congress passed last July, the value of all stablecoins is now more than $300 billion — roughly 7% of all crypto in circulation.

Stablecoin’s run is even more impressive given that its stability is overrated. Safety and security as an asset vary widely by issuer, and stablecoins offer little benefit to crypto investors and almost nothing to non-crypto investors.

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Strategy Makes History With S&P’s Credit Rating of a Bitcoin Treasury Company

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Strategy Makes History With S&P’s Credit Rating of a Bitcoin Treasury Company
Bitcoin’s march into mainstream finance just hit a landmark moment as a major credit agency officially rated a bitcoin treasury firm, signaling a seismic shift in how traditional markets recognize digital assets as strategic reserves.
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Better Cryptocurrency Buy: Ethereum vs. Zcash | The Motley Fool

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Better Cryptocurrency Buy: Ethereum vs. Zcash | The Motley Fool

One is a store of value with privacy features, and the other is a platform for assets and finance.

It’s quite clear that both Ethereum (ETH +3.17%) and Zcash (ZEC +25.26%) have value. Right now, Zcash’s price is sprinting upward each day, and during the past three months, it has gained more than 500%. On the other hand, Ethereum remains the network where most of the useful financial activity happens, and that activity is increasingly aligned with how big money wants to operate.

So, which is the better coin to buy?

Image source: Getty Images.

Ethereum is way out in front in DeFi

Investors win when an asset offers real economic value.

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On that front, Ethereum leads the decentralized finance (DeFi) sector by a wide margin. You can see this in its total value locked (TVL) of $86.8 billion, which is a strong proxy for the amount of work being done on the chain. As of today, Ethereum hosts the largest DeFi base by far, as it makes inroads in another important growth segment: real-world assets.

The most credible institutional use case in crypto right now is the tokenization of real-world assets (RWAs) like U.S. Treasuries and exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Ethereum is the default venue, with $11.9 billion in RWAs parked on its chain. As RWA-related capital inflows continue, the coin will be in higher demand and feature more value on its chain.

Ethereum Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(3.17%) $125.03

Current Price

$4075.04

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Of course, Ethereum has plenty of competition in DeFi and RWAs. It will have even more competition in the future. The point is that large asset managers already build on or start from Ethereum’s stack, then branch out to other chains as they see the benefits of doing so. This matters for the long term because it helps cement standards, tooling, and liquidity based on Ethereum’s norms and requirements.

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Buying Ethereum today is buying the leading blockchain for asset management today and tomorrow, and, as an investment thesis, its progress makes taking the plunge look fairly appealing.

Zcash’s edge is privacy, but that’s a double-edged sword

Zcash doesn’t have a DeFi ecosystem, nor will it. It’s also unlikely that the chain will be used to manage RWAs anytime soon. As a privacy coin, its use case is much closer to Bitcoin‘s. It also has some additional features which, if used, can mask the identities of senders and receivers, as well as the quantity transacted.

In practice, however, investors must weigh this promise against real frictions.

First, the regulation remains a significant headwind for privacy coins. In short, financial regulators do not like it when there are assets that can be used for private transactions, as that could shield illegal activity. Thus, Zcash has struggled to remain listed on some of the leading crypto exchanges, and has actually been delisted in some cases.

Zcash Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(25.26%) $69.50

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Current Price

$344.69

Second, Zcash’s privacy is optional, and at least a tiny bit inconvenient to those who use it. Many coinholders transact transparently rather than using shielded wallet addresses, undercutting the network’s differentiation in day-to-day usage. Shielded adoption is growing compared to the past, but it still isn’t a majority of the network’s transaction value.

Finally, Zcash’s value mechanism is thin compared to Ethereum’s. There is no comparable DeFi or RWA ecosystem on offer. Thus, it relies on its Bitcoin-like scarcity mechanisms, including its halving process, and persistent demand for its privacy capabilities, to have any shot at gaining in value over the long term.

Could Zcash be a good investment in light of those constraints? Yes, it could be, and for many, it probably will be. But as of today, compared to Ethereum, Zcash is a smaller asset with far more obstacle to its success, some of which are unlikely to abate.

For investors allocating capital, Ethereum is the better buy today. Zcash could still be a decent purchase, but it’s higher-risk. Putting aside its recent moonshot, it probably doesn’t have as much upside in store for those who buy it now.

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