China Bans Crypto: How This Affects Global Markets and Investors in Europe
China Bans Crypto: How This Affects Global Markets and Investors in Europe

China Bans Crypto: How This Affects Global Markets and Investors in Europe

Ellie Montgomery · February 9, 2026 · 3m

Disclaimer: This material is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.

China is tightening its stance on virtual currencies again. Regulators reaffirmed restrictions on crypto activity, stated that unauthorised issuance of offshore yuan-pegged stablecoins is illegal, and signalled stricter scrutiny for tokens linked to onshore assets.

One important nuance: in parallel, China is moving toward controlled real-world asset (RWA) tokenisation within a legal framework, including rules that can cover offshore issuance backed by onshore assets.

For an investor in Europe, this has two layers of impact: a short-term layer (volatility and liquidity) and a long-term layer (infrastructure, stablecoins, and Asia’s role in global capital flows).

How This Affects the Global Crypto Market

1) Short term: Volatility and flow shocks are possible, not guaranteed

Markets often react to China because of expectations: tighter controls can mean fewer familiar rails for capital inflows/outflows. That adds friction during periods when risk-off already dominates.

If you’re in the EU and hold risk assets, focus on two practical signals:

  • whether liquidity availability changes (especially in stablecoins);
  • whether entry/exit costs rise (wider spreads, delays, stricter service limits).

2) Medium term: Pressure on the “yuan stablecoin” angle strengthens the USD stablecoin axis

Calling offshore yuan-pegged stablecoin issuance illegal is about controlling monetary substitutes and the liquidity plumbing around them.

If yuan-stablecoins get squeezed, the market leans even harder on USD stablecoins as the default settlement layer. That matters for Europe because, at the same time, the EU is trying to reduce dollarisation in crypto settlement by developing euro-denominated alternatives—this is already part of the public policy discussion.

3) Long term: Asia doesn’t disappear — flows get re-routed

Historically, hard bans in China did not mean zero activity. They tended to mean more offshore activity, more grey routes, and a bigger role for Hong Kong and external venues.

Now there’s an added layer: controlled tokenisation of assets can become a permitted corridor for legal projects and institutional structures.

EU Investor Checklist After China Headlines

  1. Reduce leverage, or keep it inside a strict, separate limit.
  2. Assess portfolio liquidity: the more thinly traded assets you hold, the more painful execution becomes.
  3. Review your stablecoin exposure (which assets, where they sit, and which rails you depend on).
  4. Keep part of your capital in a predictable mode to avoid making decisions under stress. If it helps to have a portion of funds working with a clear payout logic, Hexn offers Hodl — fixed-income deposits with up to 20% APY and weekly payouts.

Conclusion

China’s crypto ban is best read as a shift in how flows are routed: pressure on retail crypto activity alongside an attempt to formalise permitted rails for RWA tokenisation. In these periods, trading costs tend to rise, liquidity can worsen, and a predictable portfolio structure becomes more valuable.

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China’s Crypto Ban: What It Means for Markets and Europe | Hexn