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Topic: How will chinese miners pivot from their exchanges shutting down on the 30th? (Read 854 times)

hero member
Activity: 966
Merit: 552
Well the Chinese government doesn't ban activity of bitcoins mining and i don't find information about it on any other website and news, the banning of Chinese markets is not problem for Chinese miners because many method be used for sell their bitcoins, they can sell the bitcoins on localbitcoin and any other place, so even the markets of bitcoins be banned by their government, they still can mine bitcoins and keep make money with bitcoins.
legendary
Activity: 1279
Merit: 1018
I dont see the Chinese gov doing anything like banning the miners. Why would they.
The miners will have to sell on foreign exchanges and ship the money back into china which means a net inflow of capital rather than the other scenario when the local exchanges were open and people were spending yuan to buy bitcoin and shipping out the bitcoin to foreign lands
hero member
Activity: 854
Merit: 522
The Chinese miners still can trade the bitcoins on the localbitcoin.com and other place include on bitcointalk in currency exchange section, i don't think the mining activity will be closed too as long the miners pay electric and internet bill, due to on the mining activity there are no process exchange fiat money to bitcoins just transaction payment electric and internet bill and it can not be regulated by government, it is something common around the world.
legendary
Activity: 2968
Merit: 3684
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Right, so we've all established that there's more than one way to skin the cat. The cat being Bitcoin and the skin being converting it to fiat. Up til now, I've always assumed that miners have only been selling enough BTC to keep the operations going, or to expand their hashpower. But what if all these huge miners have never actually needed to sell any of their coins? What if, the business model was simply to put in actual fiat into the business of mining, and all coins mined were actually kept or diversified out into other alts, or better still, other businesses accepting Bitcoin?

I would imagine that these exchanges from BTCC and via anyway, who are also miners, were simply a side business that doesn't really harm their prospects?

I also note that there are bound to be huge, serious buyers out there, willing to buy coins outside a traditional exchange.
hero member
Activity: 560
Merit: 500
Any thoughts from bigger players in the scene of how they will change it up since theres a ton of hashing power coming out of china. I understand that the japanese are taking advantage of this and I have been seeing a surge of bitcoin going into japanese exchanges. I just want to understand whats going on with all that hardware. Thanks.
They can still convert it to fiat via services that lets them cash out their bitcoin using a bitcoin credit card for example and there are a ton of services offering that. They can really afford buying a plastic credit card from those services and maybe some will find a more convenient way to cash out their mined bitcoins, they wont quit just because of FUD. Also, Chinese exchanges werent really is not banned now, only ICO's so it is still convenient for them.
legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1048
Sooner or later exchanges with the proper licenses will appear again and the business will continue as usual, maybe even before the 30th of next month

im curious if this will be the case; it will be a quick move if they are able to put down a complete regulatory framework by then. what im more concerned about is the supply that comes from china, that is a bit too large to handle via p2p transactions. unless major miners leave their home market, they should have a difficult time liquidating that much btc in a market with absolutely no liquidity. i want to see if this artificial supply restriction in bitcoins biggest market, actually drives the price up.

what i suspect is that the rampant speculation would see the price rise regardless. but we will all see, and very soon.


can we have one month without some bullshit man ?!
hero member
Activity: 2184
Merit: 531
Any thoughts from bigger players in the scene of how they will change it up since theres a ton of hashing power coming out of china. I understand that the japanese are taking advantage of this and I have been seeing a surge of bitcoin going into japanese exchanges. I just want to understand whats going on with all that hardware. Thanks.

My expert trader said that Chinese just want to make a regulation, not permanently ban so bitcoin still have chance to exist on China in future.
I'm also heard that there are some exchanger that still exist, of course not a big exchanger
That's right nobody is banning Bitcoin in China. ICOs were banned , that's true, but Bitcoin wasn't. Exchanges are being closed because of their involvement in ICOs and I believe it's not permanent. Some people from China were explaining this on the forum, you just need to find the threads in bitcoin discussion.
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1521
but for the miners, i think they still mining bitcoin until there are no banning from the government for the mining itself. the miners will move into japanese market and selling their bitcoin into that market.

There's no restrictions on miners currently, and I strongly believe there won't be. The bigger context for this crackdown on cryptocurrency is an attempt to control the shadow banking industry. The reason? Because of all the capital flight overseas, particularly into real estate in the West.

How does mining fit into that? Well, Bitmain is by far the biggest ASIC manufacturer in the industry. As an aside, they are now also manufacturing Scrypt miners as well. This means massive amounts of capital inflow into the country (as international buyers pay Bitmain with USD or BTC)... and this is precisely what the government needs.

They are walking a tightrope between the shadow banking industry and a mining industry which is beneficial to their economy.
hero member
Activity: 821
Merit: 1003
Sooner or later exchanges with the proper licenses will appear again and the business will continue as usual, maybe even before the 30th of next month
hero member
Activity: 959
Merit: 500
I do not see how banning exchanges will affect the miners.
They have the options to bring their bitcoins to an exchange in Japan or anywhere else in the world.
For the miners the main consequence is the decreased price of the bitcoin, everything else is not relevant to them.
full member
Activity: 208
Merit: 100
China didn't ban mining. No reason to do this.
hero member
Activity: 1036
Merit: 504
Bitcoin mining will never stop as long as it is profitable. I think that the Chinese will use other exchanges outside of the jurisdiction of China to dump the Bitcoin. There are always ways around the local laws and I am sure they will find a way to sell the Bitcoins. Bitcoin itself or mining is not banned in China only the Chinese exchanges are for now shutting down operations.
hero member
Activity: 2912
Merit: 541
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i think if chinese really close the market, japanese will taking over bitcoin market in asia and maybe japanese will become bigger than chinese. but for the miners, i think they still mining bitcoin until there are no banning from the government for the mining itself. the miners will move into japanese market and selling their bitcoin into that market.
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
most likely they will legalize their mining or pay a large tax.
full member
Activity: 322
Merit: 179
Quote from: Charlie Shrem
Bitcoin is cash with wings.

Miners can choose what exchange they want to work with...anywhere in the world. If you mine in China you don't have to use an exchange in China.

That's the beauty of Bitcoin. It's also why the Chinese government action doesn't really hurt Bitcoin other than momentary bad press.

Yeah I thought as much too. Chinese Miners should not really be affected. The media or press FUD is even hurting bitcoin more than the news action itself. It's so frustrating !!!!

Agreed. There are other ways the Chinese can sell their BTC, I don't think this will hurt the mining industry.
member
Activity: 471
Merit: 10
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Quote from: Charlie Shrem
Bitcoin is cash with wings.

Miners can choose what exchange they want to work with...anywhere in the world. If you mine in China you don't have to use an exchange in China.

That's the beauty of Bitcoin. It's also why the Chinese government action doesn't really hurt Bitcoin other than momentary bad press.

Yeah I thought as much too. Chinese Miners should not really be affected. The media or press FUD is even hurting bitcoin more than the news action itself. It's so frustrating !!!!
legendary
Activity: 1946
Merit: 1137
Any thoughts from bigger players in the scene of how they will change it up since theres a ton of hashing power coming out of china.
Chinese and all the rest of the miners will continue to do whatever they were doing before. the small time miners don't usually sell their coins since their costs are not that high to want to cover it by selling precious bitcoin. they mostly hold and if they want to sell there are many was to do it still.

for big time miners like the big farms, they always had their own way of selling. they rarely used exchanges. using exchange lets the government also know how much you have earned! so they will continue using what they have been using before.

Quote
I understand that the japanese are taking advantage of this and I have been seeing a surge of bitcoin going into japanese exchanges. I just want to understand whats going on with all that hardware. Thanks.
the Japanese volume went up a long time ago when they started talking about legalizing it and then the volume went to the moon when they actually did legalize it. then it grow even more when the biggest Forex broker in the world which happened to be in Japan added bitcoin trading. and finally it grew a little more this time when they removed taxes on bitcoin payments.
legendary
Activity: 1862
Merit: 1015
Any thoughts from bigger players in the scene of how they will change it up since theres a ton of hashing power coming out of china. I understand that the japanese are taking advantage of this and I have been seeing a surge of bitcoin going into japanese exchanges. I just want to understand whats going on with all that hardware. Thanks.

My expert trader said that Chinese just want to make a regulation, not permanently ban so bitcoin still have chance to exist on China in future.
I'm also heard that there are some exchanger that still exist, of course not a big exchanger
legendary
Activity: 3542
Merit: 1352
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Exchanges are what's going to be banned and not the mining scene. They can still trade freely using some overseas exchanges if they want, so that hardware is not going to waste. China wouldn't be completely deleted off the scene; they just need to readjust on what's happening due to their gov't pressing regulations strictly.
klf
legendary
Activity: 1344
Merit: 1000
I don't know about this but I know the reason behind banning ICOs in their country, it is just that they want to create their own bitcoin. And I don't think that they can create a bitcoin that will match the bitcoin itself. And if they are to launch a new coin they need to have an ICO right? So it has a contrast on the idea of banning ICOS.

All these bans are not done for that reason. Chinese tried their best to regulate these bitcoin and other coins but they didn't succeed in it until now and they want to stop all the illegal transactions happening currently. So first stopping these things and later they may come up with some other rules to run these exchanges.
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