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Bitcoin price latest: Cryptocurrencies will rebound despite market crash, say veteran investors

Reuters
Reuters

Suggestions that cryptocurrency trading could be banned has sent South Korean investors running and the price of bitcoin plunging. But many suggest that even an outright ban would be fine – since it would be fairly easy to get around.

After South Korea’s most senior financial policymaker announced this week that the government could entirely ban trading, the market plunged by about $200bn (£144bn) in all. bitcoin has fallen through the $10,000 mark – after nearly reaching $20,000 just weeks ago.

Such wild falls and rises have happened before. China shut down local exchanges in September, for instance, and bitcoin dropped by 50 per cent. But soon after the price came back, rising as high as $20,000 within weeks.

Veteran investors hope that the same thing will happen this time around, despite talk of a crash and the bursting of the bubble that has propelled digital currencies so high.

“In case the government shuts down all local exchanges, investors can always go abroad and open an account there,” said a South Korean student who declined to be named because of legal risks. “I can ask my friends who study abroad or travel there myself. It’s not that big of a problem.”

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Whether or not to buy bitcoin and other digital currencies amid crash

Cryptocurrency experts say the student probably has good reason to be relaxed. A ban could discourage new market entrants, but the anonymity of buyers and sellers and the ability to move digital assets anywhere in the world with a click makes it hard to impose restrictions on existing participants without a global consensus.

Places like Singapore and Hong Kong maintain light regulations, while neighbouring Japan has encouraged a vast ecosystem of companies and investors around digital assets by pioneering a set of rules for the industry. Germany has said national restrictions may be useless.

According to industry experts, the first step to circumventing a ban is hiding IP addresses from authorities via virtual private networks (VPNs).

Traders can then continue business as usual. Decentralised exchanges, such as Shapeshift or Stellar Dex, do not require identification and can be accessed from anywhere.

Cryptocurrency wallets such as Exodus and Jaxx are linked to such exchanges, so trading and storing the assets can still be anonymous. Authorities in countries with strong legal protections may need a warrant to check computers or smartphones for proof of such activity.

Even then, unless caught in the act, the holder can claim no trading has taken place since the legislation was approved and has forgotten the password for the wallet.

Some decentralised exchanges offer derivative products that allow betting on the price of a cryptocurrency against a fiat currency, including the Korean won and Chinese yuan. But cashing out in fiat is not possible on such exchanges.

An option in that case is to trade all cryptocurrencies for a top one such as bitcoin, ethereum or litecoin, and sell it at one the 2,064 crypto ATMs in 61 countries, although the transaction fees can exceed 10 per cent. If need be, coins can be stored on offline “wallets” the size of a USB stick.

Alternatively, holders can open bank accounts in countries that have not banned bitcoin, then join a local centralised exchange where they can trade cryptocurrencies for fiat.

“I hold everything in a hard wallet the size of my thumb. I have copies of my private keys in a safe. I have accounts on four exchanges on three continents. If any government wants my money, good luck to them,” said a Hong Kong-based investor who claims to hold “about $1m” in various cryptocurrencies.

A 30-year-old nurse in Seoul said she had already switched to Hong Kong-based exchange Binance before the government’s warnings hit the market. Company officers at Seoul-based exchanges say, anecdotally, such moves have accelerated.

“All this could lead to serious money outflow and only the government is not aware of it,” one officer said, requesting anonymity.

South Korea accounts for between 5 and 15 per cent of daily bitcoin trading. The value of all bitcoins is around $200bn.

If opening accounts overseas proves difficult, friends, family or the local bitcoin community can help. Another option is to find someone with access to an exchange – preferably using encrypted social media apps such as Whatsapp or Telegram – and sell to them at a discount. But fraud is a risk.

“There could be a black market where people who can cash out offshore can pay you in won for your bitcoins,” said Aurelian Menant, chief executive of Hong-Kong based exchange Gatecoin.

But that leaves the door open to “dodgy stuff”, Menant said, adding that the fear of scams in the aftermath of a ban may deter new investors, potentially shrinking Korean trading volumes “from billions to millions”.

Additional reporting by Reuters

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