Chinaâs bitcoin users and traders may face a further wait for services to be restored at the countryâs major exchanges.
While BTCC, Huobi and OKCoin yesterday announced that they had completed technical upgrades requested by the Peopleâs Bank of China, local legal experts believe a decision is likely to be delayed until the end of the National Peopleâs Congress, which unites lawmakers through 15th March.
Financial services consultant Zennon Kapron, an author who has written on Chinaâs relationship with bitcoin, for example, believes itâs âunlikelyâ that any change in the regulatorâs current positions will be made before then.
Bitcoin withdrawals at major exchanges have been suspended since 9th February, when Huobi and OKCoin revealed they would halt operations for one month in order to upgrade their AML systems.
BTCC, while originally promising a speedy return to normal, eventually said it would delay services for one month, as well, and smaller exchanges later followed suit.
In agreement with Kapron was Roland Sun, legal lead for blockchain consortium effort ChinaLedger, who said exchanges werenât likely to reopen âthis week or nextâ due to the congress.
Adding to the speculation is that China-based bitcoin exchange Yunbi, which was one of the rare services not to suspend withdrawals, announced yesterday that it would cease allowing bitcoin and litecoin transactions.
The exchange stated:
âDue to the uncertainty of AML system upgrading time, the resuming time has not been determined.â
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