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China’s PBOC Crackdown Sends Bitcoin Tumbling From $1,150 as Three Major Exchanges Face Investigation

Bitcoin experienced a dramatic reversal in the first week of January 2017, plunging from a near-record high of 8,000 yuan (approximately $1,150) on January 5 to below $800 within days, as China’s central bank launched a sweeping investigation into the country’s three largest cryptocurrency exchanges. The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) deployed inspection teams to BTCChina in Shanghai and simultaneously opened probes into Huobi and OKCoin in Beijing, sending shockwaves through a market where over 90% of global Bitcoin trading volume originated.

TL;DR

  • PBOC launched coordinated probes into BTCChina, Huobi, and OKCoin over money laundering and foreign exchange violations
  • Bitcoin crashed over 15% from its January 5 high of 8,000 yuan to approximately 5,350 yuan ($774)
  • Chinese exchanges voluntarily introduced 0.2% trading fees and curtailed margin lending
  • PBOC banned exchanges from advertising yuan depreciation narratives
  • The crackdown signaled the beginning of a prolonged regulatory offensive that would reshape the global crypto landscape throughout 2017

The Build-Up: Bitcoin’s December Rally and the Yuan Factor

Bitcoin’s surge above $1,000 in late December 2016 and early January 2017 was fueled in large part by Chinese demand. The Chinese yuan had depreciated approximately 7% against the US dollar throughout 2016, driven by concerns over capital outflows and anticipated US interest rate hikes. Bitcoin, with its borderless nature and pseudonymous transactions, became an attractive vehicle for Chinese investors seeking to move wealth beyond the country’s strict $50,000 annual foreign exchange quota.

The rally was dramatic. Bitcoin’s price in yuan terms soared past 8,000 yuan per unit on January 5, 2017, marking a level not seen since the heady days of 2013 when the cryptocurrency had gained 900% before suffering an equally spectacular crash. But the euphoria was short-lived. Panicked investors found themselves unable to access Huobi and OKCoin transaction services during peak volatility, and the PBOC moved swiftly to assert control.

The PBOC Strikes: Coordinated Exchange Investigations

On January 11, the Shanghai Head Office of the PBOC announced it had begun investigating BTCChina — the country’s largest Bitcoin trading platform at the time — over issues ranging from money laundering to foreign currency exchange violations. Simultaneously, the PBOC’s operations office in Beijing dispatched inspection teams to Huobi and OKCoin, two other leading exchanges that together handled the lion’s share of Chinese Bitcoin trading.

The immediate market reaction was brutal. Bitcoin dropped more than 15% to 5,350 yuan ($774) within hours of the announcement. The sell-off was not confined to China; because Chinese exchanges accounted for an overwhelming majority of global Bitcoin trading, the price decline rippled across international markets, pushing Bitcoin below $900 on major Western exchanges.

Exchanges Scramble to Comply

In the days following the PBOC announcement, the three targeted exchanges moved quickly to demonstrate compliance. BTCC, Huobi, and OKCoin all introduced transaction fees of 0.2% per trade — a significant shift for platforms that had previously offered zero-fee trading to attract volume. BTCC CEO Bobby Lee told media that the fees were not mandated by the PBOC but were introduced proactively to address the regulator’s concerns about excessive speculation.

More significantly, the exchanges curtailed margin trading, which had allowed traders to borrow money to amplify their Bitcoin positions. This had been a key driver of the parabolic price increase, and its removal helped deflate the speculative bubble. The PBOC also explicitly prohibited Huobi and OKCoin from mentioning the depreciation of the yuan in their marketing materials, cutting off a narrative that had attracted capital flight-driven demand.

Broader Implications for Blockchain Technology

Beyond the immediate price impact, the PBOC’s actions highlighted the growing tension between decentralized blockchain technology and centralized government control. Bitcoin’s underlying blockchain — described by Chinese state media as a “digital ledger system using sophisticated cryptography” — was acknowledged as having genuine technological merit, even as the cryptocurrency itself drew regulatory scrutiny.

Notably, the Chinese government was simultaneously accelerating its own research into an official digital currency. Having floated plans as early as 2014, the PBOC was developing a government-backed digital currency that would be issued by the central bank and initially introduced in certain money markets. This parallel track suggested that China’s opposition was not to blockchain technology itself, but rather to decentralized cryptocurrencies that operated outside state control.

At the time of the crackdown, Bitcoin was trading at approximately $911, with a market capitalization of roughly $14.7 billion. Ethereum, still in its early stages, was priced at just $10.29 with a market cap of $902 million. The total cryptocurrency market was valued at approximately $16.6 billion — a fraction of what it would become by year’s end.

Why This Matters

The January 2017 PBOC investigation was a watershed moment that established a template for government intervention in cryptocurrency markets that continues to this day. The episode demonstrated that regulatory action in a single country — particularly one as dominant in trading volume as China was at the time — could move global markets by double-digit percentages within hours. It also revealed the fundamental tension between Bitcoin’s decentralized ethos and the practical reality of concentrated exchange infrastructure, a dynamic that would repeatedly resurface throughout 2017 and beyond. For the blockchain industry, the crackdown underscored the importance of regulatory compliance and the need to distinguish between the technology’s legitimate applications and its use as a vehicle for speculation and capital flight.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own research before making investment decisions.

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14 thoughts on “China’s PBOC Crackdown Sends Bitcoin Tumbling From $1,150 as Three Major Exchanges Face Investigation”

  1. btcchina_refugee

    The BTCChina probe was the scariest because they were the biggest at the time. Bobby Lee tried to put a brave face on it but you could tell the pressure was immense.

  2. Bitcoin going from 8,000 yuan to 5,350 yuan in days. That was a 33% crash in CNY terms. The leverage unwind was vicious.

    1. I bought my first whole BTC during this crash at around $820. Best trade I ever made. Panic in China was a buying opportunity for everyone else.

      1. buying during china panic was the play in 2013, 2017, and 2021. every time the headline says china banned btc the dip gets bought

    2. over 90% of global btc volume came from three chinese exchanges in early 2017. one regulatory letter could move the entire market

  3. my uncle worked at one of the exchanges under investigation. he said the PBOC inspectors showed up with no warning and sat in the office for 3 days straight

  4. the 0.2% trading fee introduction was the real structural change. before that, zero-fee trading on huobi and okcoin inflated volume numbers massively

    1. zero fee trading also enabled massive wash trading. the real volume was maybe a third of what coinmarketcap showed back then

    2. Hu J. the zero fee era inflated volumes so badly. coinmarketcap showed china doing 90% of volume but real volume was maybe 30% of that. pure wash trading

  5. my cousin was trading on OKCoin during the probe. said the inspectors literally sat behind the devs watching every trade for 3 days. insane pressure

  6. rok_miner_ 33% crash in CNY terms in days. the leverage unwind was absolutely vicious. people who were long on margin got wiped overnight

  7. vol_farm_ over 90% of global volume came from those 3 exchanges. one letter could move entire market

  8. Chen Wei regulators showed up with no warning and sat in offices for 3 days. pressure was immense

  9. btc_800_vibes bought my first whole BTC during this crash. china panic is always buying opportunity

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