Beijing has said 'no' to crypto, but that doesn't seem to affect a number of Chinese citizens who have continued trading digital coins since the ban - reportedly, on exchanges including Binance, FTX, OKX, and Huobi.
According to a Bloomberg report, some portion of the country's 1.4 billion people are seeking alternatives to traditional investments, including stocks and property, and they are turning to crypto.
The article cited "varied sources", including FTX’s creditor profile, citizens who stated that they used crypto platforms, and industry insiders describing workarounds to the ban.
FTX's US bankruptcy filings showed that Chinese users accounted for 8% of the exchange’s customers, with advisers counting more than 9 million customer accounts, and claims from creditors amounting to some $11.6 billion.
Jack Ding, a partner with crypto regulations specialist Duan & Duan Law Firm, told Bloomberg that he represents six Chinese creditors with a combined $10 million of FTX claims.
Meanwhile, Chinese investors noted the compliance challenge during interviews: four said that, after the ban was in place, they had traded on Binance, and another said he'd used OKX as well.
Four claimed they lived in mainland China and had passed know-your-customer (KYC) procedures using Chinese identification.
Another Chinese investor, who lives in Silicon Valley, USA, said his $8 million of crypto has been frozen on Binance since July at the request of the police in central Chongqing city who are investigating coins allegedly linked to illegal online casinos.
OKX declined to comment, said the report, while a Binance spokesperson denied that the company operates in mainland China in any way.
"Following the September 2021 ban, the Binance platform,
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