Close Menu
Crypto Valley Journal
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Crypto Valley Journal
    • Hot Topics
      • News
      • Minds
    • Focus
      • Background
      • Blockchain
      • Legal & Compliance
      • Non-Fungible Token (NFTs)
    • Investing
      • Markets
      • Financial Products
      • Decentralized Finance (DeFi)
      • Exchange overview
    • Education
      • Basics
      • Glossary
      • Politicians on crypto
    • Statistics
      • Bitcoin-ETF-Flows
      • Ethereum-ETF-Flows
      • Crypto market data
      • On-chain data
    • Academy
      • Overview
      • Part 1: Blockchain
      • Part 2: Money
      • Part 3: Bitcoin
      • Part 4: Cryptocurrencies
      • Part 5: Decentralized Finance
      • Part 6: Investing
    • English
      • Deutsch
    Crypto Valley Journal
    You are at:Home » Focus » Legal & Compliance » China announces harsh crackdown on crypto assets and stablecoins
    China announces harsh crackdown on crypto assets and stablecoins

    China announces harsh crackdown on crypto assets and stablecoins

    By Editorial Office CVJ.CH on 1. December 2025 Legal & Compliance

    The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) has reaffirmed its strict stance on cryptocurrencies and announced a new initiative. Following a recently held government meeting, it plans to consistently pursue violations of the crypto ban - with a particular focus on stablecoins.

    In a joint session with around a dozen government agencies, China’s central bank declared that virtual currencies - including stablecoins - still do not have the status of legal tender. Activities involving the trading, issuance, or transfer of such currencies are considered illegal financial operations. Stablecoins in particular are viewed as problematic, as many providers fail to implement sufficient measures for customer identification and anti-money laundering. The central bank announced heightened inspections, investigations, and potential sanctions to protect financial stability and capital flows, according to a Reuters.

    Subscribe to our newsletter

    The best articles of the week, directly delivered into your mailbox.

    Why the focus is on stablecoins

    The PBoC describes stablecoins as potential vehicles for money laundering, fraud, and illicit capital transfers. Unlike traditional cryptocurrencies, the systemic risk is higher due to their peg to real fiat currencies combined with a lack of regulatory oversight. This enables transfers that could circumvent traditional capital controls. For this reason, related business activities are to be rigorously suppressed.

    To implement this, China has announced that it will tighten existing bans and enhance cross-agency cooperation - including financial regulators, police, and judicial authorities. Monitoring digital payment flows, freezing accounts, banning token issuance, and imposing sanctions are expected to be part of the strategy.

    These measures are likely to have significant consequences for crypto companies, stablecoin projects, and cross-border transfers - not only within China. Companies in Hong Kong and internationally active providers must also expect increased scrutiny and potential withdrawal from the Chinese market.

    Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater Associates Minds

    Star investor Ray Dalio considers Bitcoin inferior to gold

    Most crypto cards hide who issues them. After mapping the licensed issuers, here is why Switzerland's self-issuing model reads differently. Background

    The bank you never chose: who really issues Switzerland’s crypto cards

    Robinhood Perpetual Futures in Europe now cover commodities and currencies, and the broker plans a crypto launch in the United Kingdom. Financial Products

    Robinhood Perpetual Futures expand to commodities in Europe

    Digital finance transparency relies on Proof of Reserves, Merkle trees, MPC custody and 24/7 monitoring to verify solvency and user assets. Basics

    Transparency as the foundation of security in digital finance

    Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater Associates Minds

    Star investor Ray Dalio considers Bitcoin inferior to gold

    Most crypto cards hide who issues them. After mapping the licensed issuers, here is why Switzerland's self-issuing model reads differently. Background

    The bank you never chose: who really issues Switzerland’s crypto cards

    Implications for markets and regulators

    Since the mining and trading ban in 2021, China has maintained its restrictive course. The new initiative shows that authorities not only intend to enforce existing rules but also actively target new forms of digital assets. Beijing is sending a clear message: digital currencies, especially stablecoins, will not be tolerated - regardless of whether they operate in a decentralized or peer-to-peer manner.

    From a global perspective, this once again highlights how differently countries regulate cryptocurrencies. While in some jurisdictions stablecoins and tokenization are seen as innovation, others enforce a zero-tolerance policy - with repercussions for people, companies, and financial flows worldwide.

    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp

    About the author

    Editorial Office CVJ.CH
    • Website
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn

    Since 2018, the editorial team at Crypto Valley Journal has been reporting from Zug - the heart of Switzerland’s Crypto Valley - on Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, blockchain, and regulatory developments in digital assets. Behind the publication’s collective editorial voice is a team of writers with backgrounds in financial markets, law, and technology.

    Related Articles

    The US banking regulator OCC grants Circle National Trust final approval to operate as a federal trust bank for digital assets.

    OCC grants Circle National Trust a bank license

    Germany's federal cabinet plans to scrap the one-year Bitcoin holding period and tax private crypto gains at 26.375% regardless of duration.

    Germany plans to scrap its one-year Bitcoin holding period

    India's central bank keeps pushing for a crypto ban, while the tax authority flags billions in untaxed gains among 39 million investors.

    India’s central bank RBI reaffirms crypto ban stance

    CVJ Weekly review
    11. July 2026

    Weekly review: 80mn bank customers in Germany gain access to crypto

    The US banking regulator OCC grants Circle National Trust final approval to operate as a federal trust bank for digital assets.
    10. July 2026

    OCC grants Circle National Trust a bank license

    JPMorgan ranks Strategy's sales below the bigger Bitcoin risk and names tokenization beyond public chains as the real threat.
    10. July 2026

    JPMorgan sees biggest Bitcoin risk beyond Strategy

    twitter image button instagram image button linkedin image button youtube image button

    About Crypto Valley Journal
    About Crypto Valley Journal

    On the pulse of the movement

    • Academy
    • Contact
    • Advertising
    • About us
    • Partner
    • Imprint
    • Privacy
    • Disclaimer
    Search

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.