China has been showing dual identity where despite banning crypto natively, majority of the crypto projects are owned by Chinese nationals at a pan global level, which has been showing something sinister that China wants to achieve vis-a-viz crypto.
Strategic Retreat, or Global Advance
The Chinese government’s actions effectively erased the legal presence of crypto operations within the mainland. However, rather than exiting the space, China’s tech-savvy entrepreneurs and venture capitalists have strategically rechanneled their efforts offshore. Leveraging regulatory arbitrage, they’ve established crypto headquarters in jurisdictions like Singapore, Dubai, Hong Kong, the Cayman Islands, and the British Virgin Islands.
This has allowed Chinese-led ventures to access international capital and scale rapidly—maintaining influence without violating domestic restrictions and at the same time, providing important intel to the Chinese government.
Dominance by Design To Capitalize on Opportunities or Perform Espionage
Several of the world’s leading cryptocurrency platforms and infrastructure providers were founded by Chinese entrepreneurs or remain deeply rooted in Chinese capital and talent.
- Binance, founded by Changpeng Zhao (CZ), a Chinese-Canadian developer born in Jiangsu, China, is the world’s largest crypto exchange by trading volume, with over 270 million users globally as of 2025.
- TRON, launched by Justin Sun, a protégé of Alibaba’s Jack Ma, supports smart contracts and DeFi applications while retaining strong business ties to China.
- Bitmain Technologies, once headquartered in Beijing, remains a dominant force in global Bitcoin mining hardware even after relocating post-ban.
- Cobo, Matrixport, and ImToken—all founded by Chinese technologists—offer cutting-edge wallet, custody, and financial services while operating from abroad.
- Exchanges like Huobi (HTX), CoinEx, KuCoin, Bybit, and OKX were all founded by Chinese entrepreneurs and continue to lead in global market share, product innovation, and infrastructure development.
These platforms, to an extent, are sharing sensitive information with China for a greater purpose, which is not exact but couldn’t be denied altogether says PN Mishra from Finjuris, a legal firm dealing in crypto laws and regulations.
A Quiet Empire of Crypto Influence
These ventures, while officially headquartered overseas, remain deeply influenced by Chinese leadership, investment, and market strategy. The result is a quiet yet powerful consolidation of the global crypto industry under Chinese control—a form of digital soft power that bypasses domestic bans while steering the future of decentralized finance.
With significant influence over trading volumes, mining infrastructure, DeFi protocols, and institutional services, Chinese-founded entities are well-positioned to shape international crypto standards, liquidity flows, and even policy discussions—without operating directly within China.
Future Finance, In Chinese Hands
As crypto continues its rise as the currency of the future, Chinese ownership and influence are already baked into its foundation will exercise control to influence the geo-political landscape and face of finance. This dynamic makeover provides China with a unique global financial leverage point—even while maintaining a strict domestic stance at all fronts.
In effect, China has not exited the crypto stage—it has simply changed seats or revamped the same to fit into their own narrative or to use it as a cudgel against the rest of the world.
The paradox is undeniable: the nation that outlawed cryptocurrency may be the one best positioned to profit from its global mainstream adoption.