Jack BuckbyCanadian and British regulators are on an entirely different wavelength to a significant portion of the cryptocurrency market and industry. They have implemented new regulations and cast doubt on the future of decentralized digital currencies.

The moves come as China is cracking down on all but one form of cryptocurrency, forcing Bitcoin miners out of the country to more liberal markets.

In June, the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority issued a consumer warning about Binance, the largest crypto exchange in the world. According to the FCA, Binance didn’t have the necessary registration to sell crypto derivatives and the platform would be required to warn its British consumers of the situation.

Binance soon issued a statement to customers explaining that the decision won’t affect the way consumers use their services.

Click here to downloadThe Ontario Securities Commission also began legal action against unregistered crypto exchanges in May. The OSC noted that the exchanges, including Binance, were offering securities and derivatives without registering. It prompted Binance to warn customers in Ontario that they would no longer be able to make investments on the app – effectively shutting down their services for parts of the Canadian population.

Canadian and British regulators are cracking down – although to a lesser extent than China – and it’s unclear how this will end.

The global cryptocurrency market was valued at US$792.53 million in 2019 and is expected to reach over US$5 billion by 2026. The total volume of transactions moved in 2019, however, was more than US$51.6 billion, with numbers reaching US$91.8 billion in 2021.

This huge and growing currency and investment market is being adopted in bigger numbers by the year. It poses a long-term threat to the banks and perhaps Western governments are beginning to notice that.

Either this recent regulatory involvement is a warning shot or it’s simply a matter of the government trying to maintain regulation over a volatile market. It’s up to you to decide which you think is more likely.

Meanwhile, China’s extreme crackdown on cryptocurrency makes Canada and the United Kingdom’s approach seem relatively liberal. The Chinese Communist Party has banned all mining of cryptocurrencies and imposed restrictions on trading.

How does crypto mining work?

It’s important to note, however, that this isn’t an indication that China has no faith in digital currency. In fact, quite the opposite is true.

China is expected to hand out US$6.2 million worth of its digital yuan currency to citizens in Beijing as part of a lottery scheme. Residents of the Chinese capital will be able to use two banking apps to win one of the 200,000 “red packets” that contains 200 digital yuan. The plan comes before an expected national rollout of the digital currency, which has been in development since 2014. It comes ahead of what experts suggest could be an outright ban on holding any non-yuan digital tokens.

It is no secret that China has been ramping up efforts to establish its global financial, technological and military dominance in recent years. It could find itself with the edge over the rest of the world if its digital yuan currency thrives among its population of 1.4 billion while Western markets inhibit the natural growth of various cryptocurrencies in their own markets.

Furthermore, China’s decision to shun all but one cryptocurrency could prove beneficial for countries like Canada. That’s what IBC Group chairman and iMining CEO Khurram Shroff said this summer, describing how a shift of crypto mining operations out of China could prove a “huge opportunity for China.”

“The Toronto Stock Exchange recently listed the world’s first Bitcoin ETF (exchange-traded fund), so the nation is already ahead of the curve, in terms of mainstreaming cryptocurrencies,” he said.

The West can embrace digital currencies or hinder its growth to the point that China’s digital yuan becomes a model for the rest of the world. But as things stand, doesn’t it make you wonder whether China has more faith in cryptocurrency than the West does?

Jack Buckby is a research associate at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.

Jack is a Troy Media Thought Leader. For interview requests, click here.


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