Over the past several years, China’s regulatory approach toward virtual assets has moved through multiple phases—some focused on trading, some on mining, and others on payment channels and capital flows. Each policy shift has directly influenced market confidence and the expectations of miners.
But compared with the past, the meeting led by the People’s Bank of China on November 28, 2025, carries fundamentally different significance.
This was not merely another policy reminder or routine warning. Instead, it was the most comprehensive and impactful regulatory mobilization in the virtual asset sector in nearly four years—featuring:
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Higher department-level involvement
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Larger participation scope
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Clearer and more direct policy positions
More importantly, it signals a long-term national governance framework in which non-sovereign virtual assets will be managed under a structure that expands from financial risk prevention to financial security + social governance + coordinated multi-agency management.
For the mining industry, this is not a minor “change in policy atmosphere,” but a structural turning point that will shape long-term industry pathways.

1. From Reminder-Based Regulation to Top-Level Coordination: Three Key Signals
Compared with the well-known “9·24” policies of 2021, the most important part of the November 28 meeting was not any single sentence—but who was sitting at the table.
1.1 Upgraded departmental lineup: From multi-agency participation to top-level orchestration
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2021: Ten agencies jointly issued a policy notice.
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2025: Thirteen agencies participated directly in a centrally coordinated meeting.
Three newly highlighted participants reveal clear new priorities:
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Central Financial Commission (Central Financial Office):
Indicates that virtual assets are now viewed as part of national financial security and strategic design—not merely industry-specific risk. -
Judicial authorities:
Signals potential future development of judicial interpretations, unified standards, and clearer legal boundaries. -
National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC):
No longer focused solely on “mining rectification,” but now involved in comprehensive governance of the broader virtual asset ecosystem. This has a direct and practical impact on the mining and computing-power industry.
Key Signal #1:
China is shifting from dispersed departmental oversight to centralized coordination + integrated governance.
1.2 Virtual assets are no longer treated as a temporary issue
Many industry participants once believed policies might “gradually loosen” over time.
However, the latest signals instead show that virtual assets are now seen as:
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Long-term governance objects
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Structurally important
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Closely tied to financial and national security
Relying on “policy reversals” or “gray zones” will only grow more dangerous.
1.3 The computing-power sector is now part of the core governance map
The inclusion of the NDRC in this integrated framework means:
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Mining-related computing power will be reviewed alongside capital pathways and trading behavior.
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Key areas—IDC filings, data center legitimacy, industrial electricity consumption, energy approvals—will be examined more strictly.
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Using labels like “cloud computing” or “big data” to conceal mining activity will face increasing scrutiny.
This marks a significant shift: computing power is now a core component of virtual asset governance, not a peripheral issue.
2. Stablecoins Highlighted: Capital Channels Enter High-Intensity Oversight
For the first time, stablecoins such as USDT and USDC were explicitly identified as regulatory priorities at a national level.
This development cannot be overstated.
2.1 Stablecoins now directly intersect with foreign exchange management
As RMB cannot directly enter virtual asset trading environments, a common path emerged:
RMB → Stablecoin → Virtual assets / overseas assets
This pathway:
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Bypasses traditional FX quota controls
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Avoids trade-background verification
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Enables fast, opaque cross-border movement
Stablecoins have thus become a key vehicle for cross-border capital flows, bringing them directly into conflict with China’s FX regulatory framework.
Regulators formalizing stablecoins as a governance priority is, therefore, both expected and necessary.
2.2 A concentrated crackdown on high-risk capital activities
Recent enforcement cases often highlight stablecoins as core intermediaries due to their:
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Low cost
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High liquidity
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Fast settlement
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Difficult traceability
Regulating stablecoin channels allows authorities to:
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Target cross-border abnormal fund flows
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Combat specific illicit financial activity
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Strengthen financial and social security
This is not a temporary campaign—it is the beginning of long-term, systemic governance of stablecoin pathways.
3. The Digital RMB and the Timing of Policy Acceleration
To understand why the meeting occurred now, one must consider the development of the digital RMB (e-CNY).
By Q3 2025:
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e-CNY applications expanded across public services, retail payments, and government processes
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Transaction volumes increased
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Cross-border pilots accelerated
As e-CNY becomes foundational digital financial infrastructure, its goals inevitably overlap with some real-world functions of stablecoins:
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Cross-border settlement
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Value storage
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Intermediary currency use
Thus, in a critical development phase of China’s sovereign digital currency, stablecoins—anchored to foreign currencies and outside domestic oversight—naturally meet stricter regulatory scrutiny.
This explains:
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Why the November 28 meeting named stablecoins so directly
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Why the regulatory strategy evolved into a long-term, coordinated framework
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Why financial security and digital currency strategy are now addressed together
4. The Mining Industry’s Risk Map: A Practical, Non-Official Classification
Disclaimer: The following is not legal advice, only risk education.
Low Risk: Passive holding and small personal transactions
Generally not the focus of enforcement.
But risks include:
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Poor civil protection of virtual asset rights
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Bank account monitoring
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Freezing or prolonged account investigation
“Low risk” does not mean “safe.”
High Risk Category 1: OTC conversion and channel services
Providing RMB ⇄ USDT/USDC conversion or match-making services may involve:
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Unlicensed financial activity
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Entanglement with others’ illegal fund flows
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Being swept into criminal investigations
This sector is expected to undergo severe compression.
High Risk Category 2: Using stablecoins for foreign trade settlements
Even with legitimate trade, long-term use of stablecoins for cross-border settlement can be interpreted as:
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Evading FX controls
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Disrupting financial administration
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In severe cases, violating financial management laws
This area is now explicitly “red-lighted.”
High Risk Category 3: Token issuance and fundraising models
Including:
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Issuing tokens to raise capital
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Promises of guaranteed returns, high yields
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Structures dependent on new participant funds
Such models carry extreme legal risk and are frequently reclassified as serious financial or economic crimes.
High Risk Category 4: Domestic mining disguised as cloud computing or data services
With NDRC and other departments aligned, inspections will target:
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Abnormal commercial electricity patterns
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Data center filings inconsistent with actual server use
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Mismatch between declared business and computing-power scale
Running disguised domestic mining operations faces rising and unpredictable risk.
5. A Structural Shift: Mining Moves from Domestic Model to Global Computing Power
From 2021–2025, an industry consensus has formed:
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Achieving full domestic compliance for virtual asset mining is extremely difficult
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Overseas regions with energy advantages offer realistic alternatives
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Hong Kong provides a clear licensing framework, but not a bypass for mainland restrictions
After the November 28 meeting, this trend becomes irreversible.
5.1 Domestically: Do not rely on “policy easing expectations”
The era of gray zones, tolerance windows, or regional differences is ending.
Future decisions must be based on:
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Compliance
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Long-term stability
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Avoiding regulatory red lines
5.2 Hong Kong & global jurisdictions: Innovation must follow compliance
Hong Kong's regulatory systems aim to attract global capital—not serve as a detour for mainland participants.
Attempts to build “Mainland → Hong Kong → Virtual asset/overseas funds” loops will trigger multi-jurisdictional scrutiny.
Hong Kong is a platform, not a shortcut.
5.3 Global mining deployment: Compliance is the foundation
Regions like the Middle East, Central Asia, North America, and Latin America offer:
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Competitive energy resources
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Favorable climates
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Pro-mining policies in certain jurisdictions
But success requires full compliance with local:
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Energy rules
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Taxation
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Financial regulations
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Business licensing
China’s miners have strong engineering and deployment advantages—but the winning factor in the next decade will be:
Who can build legally recognized, long-term, stable computing power infrastructure worldwide.
Regulation will not make exceptions.
The industry’s future belongs to those who can comply, adapt, and rebuild within global rules.









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