Why is China clamping down on crypto-currency?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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-By Ishwari Chavan

Bitcoin and Ethereum, two of the most common cryptocurrencies have seen a plunge in their prices. After hitting a peak in mid-April to $65,000, Bitcoin has more than halved in the previous week to below $30,000 for the first time since January.

Modest recovery has been seen since then. Similarly, Ethereum has dropped after its peak last month.

China’s tough stance against cryptocurrency trading and mining is believed to be a major factor for the downward spiral in Bitcoin.

Why China is cracking down on cryptocurrency?

The second-largest economy plays an important role in the Bitcoin ecosystem. In recent years, it emerged as a hub for cryptocurrency. According to reports, China accounted for 65% of the total global mining capacity.

Mining operations have particularly been prominent in Inner Mongolia and Sichuan provinces due to access to cheap electricity in abundance.

According to the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index, China accounted for around two-thirds of the total computational power last year. Xinjiang and Sichuan provinces accounted for nearly half of this.

How is China’s stance evolving on crypto?

When it comes to Beijing’s stance on cryptocurrency, different positions of the government can be observed over the years. Although Bitcoin was not legal or regulated, authorities until recently, had not intensified their fight against it.

In some cases, the local governments even encouraged the mining operations. As mining activities consume a large amount of electricity, they were key sources of income during energy-rich seasons in several Chinese provinces.

However, Beijing imposed restrictions on Bitcoin back in 2013. These restrictions were aimed at reducing the use of cryptocurrency in the country.

The Central Bank banned financial institutions and other payment processors from servicing cryptocurrency-related transactions and traders. While prices plunged, they quickly saw recovery.

In 2019, China took a further tough stance. The ban on cryptocurrencies was extended from domestic entities to foreign exchanges and initial coin offering (ICO). Even then, the prices recovered quickly after witnessing a slump.

How different is China’s crackdown on cryptocurrency in 2021 so far?

This year, China launched Digital Renminbi (digital RMB), a digital currency issued by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC). With this launch of the first digital currency issued by a major economy, China accelerated its crackdown on cryptocurrencies by shutting down mining operations.

The state-owned Global Times noted, “The ban also means that more than 90% of China’s Bitcoin mining capacity is estimated to be shut down, at least for the short term.”

On May 18, the People’s Bank of China further intensified the fight. The National Internet Finance Association of China, the China Banking Association, and the Payment and Clearing Association banned financial institutions and other payment companies from servicing any cryptocurrency-related exchanges and traders.

The ban also came from the local governments that once encouraged Bitcoin mining operations.

Why does China want to ban cryptocurrency?

Cryptocurrency is a decentralized currency. The Communist Party of China’s (CCP) hesitation of unregulated currency flowing in the country and the need for high centralized control has invited the crackdown.

Like many central governments, Beijing believes cryptocurrency disrupts the economic order. It has been linked to facilitating illegal activities including illegal asset transfers and money laundering.

In addition, the high energy consumption by mining operations has been a cause of concern for China which has committed to being carbon-neutral by 2060.

How has it affected the Chinese involved in cryptocurrency?

Miners in China have already started to relocate their activities outside the country including Kazakhstan, Russia, and the United States.

The prices of cryptocurrency mining machines have slumped after their peak in April-May. These machines are now being delivered overseas.

Huang Dezhi, who operates a mining farm in Sichuan, said to Reuters, “If the government doesn’t reverse the policy, we will have no other choice. You cannot defy central government decisions.”

Others hope the ban will eventually be relaxed.



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China’s Bitcoin crackdown sparks fears of dirtier cryptomining, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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TBILISI/KUALA LUMPUR: China‘s sweeping ban on cryptocurrency mining delivered a blow to an industry criticised for its environmental impact, but emissions from the sector could grow as a result unless other countries follow China’s lead, climate and tech experts said.

Bitcoin‘s value tumbled last week after China’s central bank urged banks and payment firms in the country to crack down harder on cryptocurrency trading, in the latest tightening of restrictions on the sector by Beijing.

This was good news for climate activists, who have voiced concerns over the potential for the energy-hungry cryptocurrency mining industry to disrupt international efforts to rein in global warming.

Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are created or “mined” by high-powered computers competing to solve complex mathematical puzzles, which guzzle energy and fuel planet-warming emissions unless they consume electricity from renewable sources.

Beijing’s recent move has paralysed the Chinese industry – accounting for more than half of global cryptocurrency production – making it far more difficult for individuals in China to trade the digital coins.

But by cutting off access to China’s power grid, with its plentiful supply of affordable renewable energy, the new restrictions could push miners towards dirtier sources of electricity, warned Pete Howson, a senior lecturer in international development at Northumbria University in Britain.

“China produces enormous amounts of cheap hydroelectricity, especially in Sichuan province – all of which is now pretty much off limits to bitcoin miners,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Industry experts predict cryptocurrency production will pick up elsewhere as Chinese miners sell off their machines or seek refuge abroad – often in countries with less renewable energy.

“In both the short and medium term, (the crackdown) will likely increase the emissions related to bitcoin mining,” said Alex de Vries, founder of research platform Digiconomist, which publishes estimates of bitcoin’s climate impact.

“Without China, which is the world’s largest market for renewable energy in absolute terms, it seems unlikely miners have many opportunities to turn greener,” he added.

Shota Siradze, who runs a cryptocurrency business in Tbilisi that helps would-be miners set up shop in the former Soviet republic of Georgia, said his phone started buzzing again last week after months of silence, as China’s announcement prompted a rush of enquiries from foreign investors.

“People are writing and calling me, asking to find space to install huge quantities of processors,” he said, adding he assumed most prospective clients had just bought servers from China.

Earlier cryptocurrency booms in Georgia, which uses mostly hydroelectric power, caused a spike in energy demand and rolling power outages in the breakaway region of Abkhazia, where mining was recently banned.

While some Chinese miners are selling up, others are moving out, reportedly heading to Kazakhstan, which relies heavily on fossil fuels for electricity, or Texas, where they could push up utility bills and worsen pre-existing power woes in the southern U.S. state, researchers said.

“The state is in bad shape to welcome bitcoiners,” said Howson at Northumbria University.

“A few months ago, we saw outages there that left millions of people without power. Hundreds of people lost their lives. They froze to death. Bitcoin will make things a lot worse.”

Cryptocurrency enthusiasts say a decentralised digital currency is worth the energy cost, which they say is relatively low, compared to other key sectors of the economy.

Bitcoin mining is currently estimated to account for about 0.3% of global electricity consumption – more than Austria on an annual basis, but about a third of that used by idle household electronics in the United States each year, according to an index compiled by Cambridge University.

Still, industry critics hope China’s action will spark a global crackdown.

“It’s really important now that governments take steps to ban the import of bitcoin mining machines,” said Howson.

“Just like the global trade in Chinese tiger parts, bitcoin mining needs to be managed as an environmental crime.”

Price Volatility
More countries might indeed follow China’s lead, as concerns about cryptocurrencies are not limited to the environment, said Eswar Prasad, a trade policy professor at Cornell University in New York.

Chinese authorities say cryptocurrencies disrupt economic order, and facilitate illegal asset transfers and money laundering. Analysts say Beijing is also worried about potential competition for the digital yuan.

Last week, the Bank for International Settlements, an umbrella organisation dubbed “the central bank of central banks”, said cryptocurrencies were used for ransomware attacks and financial crimes, adding bitcoin in particular had “few redeeming public interest attributes”.

The coin can still count on influential supporters: Also last week, El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele said a law that makes the country the first to adopt bitcoin as legal tender will take effect in September.

But more broadly, China’s actions are likely to be seen as a blow to the legitimisation of decentralised cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, which could further hurt the viability of the digital currencies, said Prasad.

“The key challenge that decentralised cryptocurrencies face is that they have proven to be inefficient and costly mediums of exchange and have, instead, become speculative assets,” he said by email.

“Their lack of intrinsic value will leave them susceptible to enormous price volatility, making it harder still for them to fulfil their ostensible roles as mediums of exchange that are more efficient than existing payment technologies.”



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Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest files to offer a Bitcoin ETF, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Star stock picker Cathie Wood‘s ARK Invest filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday to create a bitcoin exchange traded fund (ETF), the latest fund manager attempting to cash in on investors’ growing interest in cryptocurrencies.

Wood, whose ARK Innovation ETF was the top-performing U.S. equity fund last year, has been a vocal proponent of bitcoin.

Her flagship ARK Innovation fund owns around $820 million worth of shares in cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase Global, making it the fund’s 10th largest holding. Coinbase has fallen 35% since its stock market debut in April.

ARK’s application to the SEC follows recent filings by Fidelity and CBOE Global Markets in March. The SEC is yet to approve a bitcoin ETF.

Bitcoin tumbled in recent days to a two-week low as China‘s expanding crackdown on bitcoin mining made investors more uncertain about the future of the leading cryptocurrency. Bitcoin on Monday traded at about $34,450, compared to its April peak of nearly $65,000.



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Bitcoin becoming the new gold as Indians pour billions into crypto, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The cryptocurrency aficionados’ mantra that Bitcoin is equivalent to digital gold is winning converts among the world’s biggest holders of the precious metal.

In India, where households own more than 25,000 tonnes of gold, investments in crypto grew from about $200 million to nearly $40 billion in the past year, according to Chainalysis. That’s despite outright hostility toward the asset class from the central bank and a proposed trading ban.

Richi Sood, a 32-year-old entrepreneur is one of those who swerved from gold to crypto. Since December, she’s put in just over 1 million rupees ($13,400) – some of it borrowed from her father – into Bitcoin, Dogecoin and Ether.

And she’s been fortunate with her timing. She cashed out part of her position when Bitcoin smashed through $50,000 in February and bought back in after the recent tumble, allowing her to fund the overseas expansion of her education startup Study Mate India.

“I’d rather put my money in crypto than gold,” Sood said. “Crypto is more transparent than gold or property and returns are more in a short period of time.”

She’s part of a growing number of Indians — now totalling more than 15 million — buying and selling digital coins. That’s catching up with the 23 million traders of these assets in the U.S. and compares with just 2.3 million in the U.K.

The growth in India is coming from the 18-35 year old cohort, says the co-founder of India’s first cryptocurrency exchange. Latest World Gold Council data indicated Indian adults under age 34 have less appetite for gold than older consumers.

“They find it far easier to invest in crypto than gold because the process is very simple,” said Sandeep Goenka, who co-founded ZebPay and spent years representing the industry in discussions with the government on regulation. “You go online, you can buy crypto, you don’t have to verify it, unlike gold.”
One of the biggest barriers preventing wider adoption is the regulatory uncertainty. Last year, the Supreme Court quashed a 2018 rule banning crypto trading by banking entities, resulting in a trading surge.

However, authorities show no signs of embracing cryptocurrencies. The nation’s central bank says it has “major concerns” about the asset class and six months ago the Indian government proposed a ban on trading in digital coins – though it has been silent on the topic since.

“I am flying blind,” said Sood. “I have a risk-taking appetite, so I’m willing to take a risk of a ban.”

The official hostility though means many bigger individual investors are reluctant to speak openly about their holdings. One banker Bloomberg spoke to who invested more than $1 million into crypto assets said with no clear income tax rules at present he was concerned about the possibility of retrospective tax raids if he was publicly known to be a big-ticket crypto investor.

He’s already got contingency plans in place to move his trading to an offshore Singapore bank account if a ban was to be introduced.

To be sure, the value of Indian digital asset holdings remain a sliver of its gold market. Still, the growth is clear, especially in trading — the four biggest crypto exchanges saw daily trading jump to $102 million from $10.6 million a year ago, according to CoinGecko. The country’s $40 billion market significantly trails China’s $161 billion, according to Chainalysis.

For now, the increasing adoption is another sign of Indians’ willingness to take risk within a consumer finance sector that’s plagued with examples of regulatory short falls.

“I think over time everyone is going to adopt it in every country,“ said Keneth Alvares, 22, an independent digital marketer who has invested more than $1,300 in crypto so far. “Right now the whole thing is scary with regulation but it doesn’t worry me because I’m not planning to remove anything for now.”



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Mexican billionaire Salinas says his banking business may embrace Bitcoin, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MEXICO CITY: Mexican billionaire Ricardo Salinas Pliego said on Sunday his banking business may begin using bitcoin, becoming the country’s first bank to start accepting the cryptocurrency.

Salinas, who is ranked as Mexico’s third richest man with a family fortune estimated at $15.8 billion by Forbes, is the owner of the large Banco Azteca banking business.

Salinas last year said he had about 10% of his liquid portfolio invested in bitcoin. On Sunday, he said all investors should study cryptocurrency and their future.

“Sure, I recommend the use of #Bitcoin, and me and my bank are working to be the first bank in Mexico to accept #Bitcoin,” Salinas said in a tweet.

Bitcoin rallied around 7.5% on Sunday to trade at around $34,500.

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Slips towards $30,000 as strategists flag Bitcoin’s near-term risks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Joanna Ossinger

Strategists are struggling to see a turnaround ahead for Bitcoin, at least for now, as the digital coin hovers around the $30,000 level.

The near-term setup is “challenging,” a JPMorgan Chase & Co. team including Josh Younger and Veronica Mejia Bustamante wrote in a note Friday, while Fundstrat Global Advisors LLC’s David Grider recommended reducing risk or buying some protection.

The JPMorgan team said blockchain data suggests recent cryptocurrency sales were made to cover losses and that “there is likely still an overhang of underwater positions which need to be cleared through the market.”

Bitcoin has halved from a peak near $65,000 in April, hurt by a cryptocurrency clampdown in China, tightening regulatory scrutiny elsewhere and concerns that the servers underpinning the virtual coin consume too much energy. The prospect of reduced emergency stimulus amid the recovery from the pandemic has also emerged as a possible obstacle for the most speculative investments.

Still, the JPMorgan strategists pointed to stability in the Bitcoin futures market as a positive factor, alongside the possibility of increased production costs as China’s crackdown pushes Bitcoin mining abroad. Some researchers argue the marginal production cost plays an important role in Bitcoin prices.

So while the “cryptocurrency market shows signs that it is not yet healthy, it does also appear to be beginning the process of healing,” they wrote.

The largest cryptocurrency fell as much as 6% to $30,296 on Saturday after dropping almost 8% on Friday. Other coins were also under pressure, with Ether dropping more than 5%. Some chart watchers view the $30,000 level as key for Bitcoin, contending a decline below it could open the way to retreat to $20,000.

Grider, lead digital asset strategist at Fundstrat, noted that a large short position has been building again on the crypto exchange Bitfinex — and said the last time there was a similar situation, negative news out of China took prices lower.



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President, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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SAN SALVADOR: Facing resistance from the World Bank, IMF and opposition parties to his move to make bitcoin legal tender in El Salvador, President Nayib Bukele has promised $30 for each citizen who adopts the cryptocurrency.

Initiated by Bukele, El Salvador’s parliament approved a law this month to allow the crypto money to be accepted as tender for all goods and services in the small Central American nation, along with the US dollar, its national currency.

The crypto money will become legal tender in September.

Bukele said that in a bid to boost its wide adoption, each citizen who opens an electronic bitcoin “wallet” named Chivo will have the equivalent of $30 uploaded to their account.

“It will be a gift,” Bukele told national television late Thursday. “Just download and register and you will receive the bitcoin equivalent of $30 to use.”

Bukele did not specify where the money would come from.

He said more than 50,000 people in the country of 6.5 million were already using bitcoin.

On Twitter, the president also accused the opposition of trying to “sow fear” among Salvadorans about the bitcoin law.

He gave an assurance that use of the cryptocurrency will be optional, and wages and pensions in the country will continue to be paid in US dollars.

Bukele has touted the move as a way to make it cheaper and easier for Salvadorans abroad — some 1.5 million, mainly in the United States — to send money back home in the form of remittances, which represent almost a quarter of the country’s GDP.

According to World Bank data, El Salvador received more than $5.9 billion in 2020 from nationals living abroad.

But opposition parties have said the plan is “unworkable” and experts and regulators have highlighted concerns about the currency’s notorious volatility and the lack of protections for its users.

On Tuesday, the cryptocurrency fell beneath $30,000 for the first time in five months. At its highest, bitcoin was worth more than $63,000 in April.

Last week, the World Bank rejected a request from El Salvador for assistance in its bid to adopt bitcoin as a currency, citing “environmental and transparency shortcomings”.

The IMF has also flagged concerns, with spokesman Gerry Rice telling reporters El Salvador’s move “raises a number of macroeconomic, financial and legal issues that require careful analysis.”

The Central American Bank for Economic Integration (CABEI) has said it will provide technical assistance for El Salvador to regulate the use of bitcoin.

On Thursday, the first bitcoin teller machine was opened in the capital San Salvador, where people can deposit dollars in cash into their bitcoin wallet.

The country’s only other bitcoin machine is in the coastal town of El Zonte, where hundreds of businesses and individuals use the cryptocurrency for everything from paying utilities bills to haircuts or buying a can of soda.



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Crypto honchos see miners fleeing China as crackdown deepens, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Joanna Ossinger and Tracy Alloway

The heads of some of the world’s biggest cryptocurrency exchanges say Bitcoin miners are shifting operations out of China as authorities intensify their crackdown on the space.

“We’re seeing a lot of those miners moving out of China to other places,” Changpeng “CZZhao, the CEO of Binance Holdings Ltd., the world’s biggest crypto exchange by reported turnover, said in an interview at the Qatar Economic Forum on Tuesday. “Some of them are sending their mining equipment to overseas. There’s big shipments.”

Zhao said he’s seen movement by clients in Binance’s mining pool, which combines the computing power of number-crunching machines that verify cryptocurrency transactions.

China’s moves have injected uncertainty into the cryptocurrency market and helped pull Bitcoin down to the lower end of its recent trading range, with the coin briefly falling below $30,000 on Tuesday after having reached nearly $65,000 in mid-April. The hashrate, which measures the processing power used in Bitcoin mining and is used as a proxy for mining activity, has also dropped by about 40 per cent in the past couple of weeks, according to data from BTC.com.

While a lower hashrate is often portrayed as a negative for Bitcoin, a temporary disruption of mining power as rigs are moved out of China could also be embraced by some Bitcoin bulls who argue that a concentration of mining capacity has long been a vulnerability for an asset prized by proponents for its independence from governments and central banks.

“In the future you’ll have a different geographical distribution of hashpower,” Sam Bankman-Fried, the former Jane Street trader who now runs the crypto derivatives exchange FTX, said in an interview on Thursday. “It’s expensive to move rigs but it’s not impossible.”

The Global Times reported that multiple Bitcoin miners in China’s Sichuan province were closed on Sunday as authorities intensified their crackdown. On Tuesday, Bloomberg reported that China had summoned officials from its biggest banks to reiterate rules banning cryptocurrency services that were first issued in 2013.

China’s measures mean the country’s share of Bitcoin mining could fall from an estimated 65 per cent to less than 50 per cent by the end of the year, according to Dan Weiskopf, co-portfolio manager of the Amplify Transformational Data Sharing ETF, an actively-managed exchange-traded fund that’s composed of blockchain-related stocks, with about 20 per cent of its portfolio in crypto miners.

Alternate destinations for Chinese mining operations include Russia, Kazakhstan and Texas, according to market participants. Weiskopf cited Canada, Sweden and Argentina as other possibilities.

“The decline in hash is probably a short-term phenomenon and evidence of China miners coming offline,” he said in an e-mail. “It is a net positive for North America miners who are now expanding and scheduled to have a lot of hash come online later in 2021 and into 2022.”



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Once an admirer, Nassim Taleb now says Bitcoin is worth zero, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: Naseem Taleb, renowned author of highly-regarded books such as Black Swan and Skin in the Game, believes that the true value of a Bitcoin is no higher than a zero.

In a paper titled ‘Bitcoin, Currencies and Bubbles’, Taleb said: “In its current version, in spite of the hype, Bitcoin failed to satisfy the notion of ‘currency without government’ (it proved to not even be a currency at all).

The noted author said that Bitcoin can neither be a short-term or long-term store of value, cannot operate as a reliable hedge against inflation, and “worst of all does not constitute, not even remotely, a tail protection vehicle for catastrophic episodes”.

The former admirer of the cryptocurrency asserted that the true value of a Bitcoin is no higher than zero. “Gold and other precious metals are largely maintenance free, do not degrade over a historical horizon, and do not require maintenance to refresh their physical properties over time. Cryptocurrencies require a sustained amount of interest in them,” Taleb wrote in his paper.

After a trailblazing run for much of 2020 and better part of 2021 so far, Bitcoin has undergone a sharp fall over the past two months triggered by China’s crackdown on cryptocurrency miners and backlash from famous enthusiast Tesla Founder Elon Musk.

After hitting a record high of $62,741 in April, Bitcoin has given up more than 50 per cent over the past two months and is now vulnerable to falling closer to its high hit during the 2017-18 bull market of around $19,000.

The surge in the price of the cryptocurrency over the past 14 months had largely been driven by new interest institutional investors such as hedge funds and certain corporations like Tesla and MicroStrategy.

Much of the interest in the coin from institutional investors rested on the notion that Bitcoin can act as a true hedge against inflation, better even then gold in some opinions. Taleb believes that for a currency to be a hedge against inflation it should have minimum variance against a basket of goods and services, a quality Bitcoin lacks.

Taleb’s paper is likely to further ignite debate in the global investment world on the true role of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. In India, cryto enthusiasts often call Bitcoin an asset, not a currency. If that is the case, Taleb’s paper may give them a headache.



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Will equalisation levy spur growth of crypto exchanges in India?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Cryptocurrencies are likely to become slightly expensive for Indian investors buying the token from exchanges outside the country. The Income-Tax department is likely to levy an additional tax of 2% in the form of equalisation levy.

The tax department is now looking into whether the 2% levy is applicable on crypto assets bought online by Indians from overseas exchanges.

The government had expanded the scope of the equalisation levy from this year to include any purchase by an Indian or India-based entity through an overseas platform.

The levy is on the selling price and companies may be required to add this to the cost of the crypto assets.

Experts said there is no clarity as to whether cryptocurrencies can be categorised as goods, services or commodities.

Payback time

Since most cryptocurrency exchanges have not paid this levy, the taxman’s scrutiny now means that customers may have to pay up.

Unlike other taxes, equalisation levy is on the selling price, which would mean that the cost of buying the crypto assets will jump by 2% for Indians.

However, many crypto exchanges in the last few years have created structures where they do not have a presence or permanent establishment in India and the Indian entity only takes care of marketing functions.

Many companies have moved to Singapore or Dubai in a bid to safeguard themselves from some of the Indian laws in the last few years.

Permanent establishment is a concept in tax laws that determines which country has the first right to tax a company and to what extent.

Many companies have moved to Singapore or Dubai in a bid to safeguard themselves from some of the Indian laws in the last few years.
Many companies have moved to Singapore or Dubai in a bid to safeguard themselves from some of the Indian laws in the last few years.

Global interest

Global digital currency exchanges are exploring ways to set up in India, following in the footsteps of market leader Binance.

U.S.-based Kraken, British Virgin Islands-based Bitfinex and rival KuCoin are actively scouting the market,

The interest in cryptocurrency has exploded in India over the last 15 months as a bull run began in bitcoin and other virtual currencies.

India’s biggest crypto exchange WazirX along with other exchanges including CoinSwitch Kuber, Zebpay, CoinDCX has seen expotential growth in the last few months. In April, WazirX claimed it hit $5.4 billion in transaction volumes, which is a tenfold rise from $500 million in December 2020. Its user base shot up by 50% to 3 million in April, and in May, it saw crypto trades worth over $380 million on its platform on a single day. CoinSwitch Kuber raised $25 million at a $500 million valuation in April 2021.

ZebPay, India’s oldest exchange for trading cryptocurrencies, aims to double monthly transactions after an explosion in demand.

ZebPay, a platform with about 4 million customers, expects to churn $2 billion worth of trades per month, which is still less than one-fifth of trades handled by top US-based exchange Coinbase Global Inc.

While there is no exact number of cryptocurrency firms operating in India, estimated that at least 50 are actively onboarding customers and collectively processing transactions worth over Rs 15,000 crore annually.



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