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China’s Regulation 42 forces Tether to kill its CNHT stablecoin

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China’s Regulation 42 forces Tether to kill its CNHT stablecoin

Tether has never been in a better place than it is right now, at least when it comes to its position in the crypto industry in America.

It’s been the largest stablecoin for nearly a decade, numerous executives and equity holders are billionaires, Howard Lutnick (who used to purchase all of Tether’s t-notes) is now the financial whisperer to President Donald Trump, and it just launched a sister version of tether (USDT) that’s available for US customers to redeem.

In the US, things are looking good.

However, in China a completely different story is unfolding — and it looks bad.

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Regulation 42 and the end of Yuan stablecoins

China released new regulatory banking guidance regarding virtual currencies and stablecoins known as Regulation 42 of 2026.

Only three cryptocurrencies are explicitly named in these new regulations: bitcoin (BTC), ether (ETH), and USDT. This suggests that they’re the most widely used and available cryptos in Mainland China.

Regulation 42 replaces 2021’s Regulation 237, placing stricter rules and harsher criminal sentences on issuers of real world tokenized assets and cryptocurrencies.

It states, “Without the approval of relevant departments in accordance with laws and regulations, no entity or individual, whether domestic or foreign, may issue stablecoins pegged to the Renminbi overseas.”

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While there may be other companies that have issued stablecoins pegged to the yuan, by far the most prominent and important is Tether, which chose to create CNH₮, pegged to the price of offshore Renminbi, in 2019.

The Yuan-pegged stablecoin has rarely been used by traders, with only 20.5 million ever being put into circulation and a few dozen individuals choosing to interact with it.

Nevertheless, shortly after the rule change in China, Tether announced that it would issue no more CNH₮ and would give anyone holding the stablecoin one year to redeem what they have.

Tether announcement fails to mention Chinese regulations

Tether claims in its announcement that the reason for the discontinuation of CNH₮ is due to “low interest in the product, and limited sustained community demand relative to other supported assets.”

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It added, “CNH₮’s usage levels don’t justify the continued operational support required to maintain it at the standards Tether applies across its products.”

Read more: The family affairs shaping Tether’s $180B empire

While true that there has been little-to-no interest in CNH₮, with the last major issuance occurring when Tether added support for it on the TRON blockchain in 2022, it failed to mention that if it continued to issue the stablecoin, it would be in direct violation of Chinese law and could face criminal prosecution, arrest, and likely years in prison if any executives or shareholders ever set foot in the Chinese mainland.

Bitfinex shareholder, Chinese OTC trader, and convicted criminal Zhao Dong, who was one of the early cheerleaders of the concept of CNH₮ before his arrest in 2020, is set to be released from Chinese prison between late 2026 and early 2027.

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This just so happens to line up with the redemption period for CNH₮. Tether will allow no redemptions beyond February 20, 2027.

Read more: China wants a yuan stablecoin, but why?

Chandler Guo, another Chinese crypto trader, has publicly stated that Zhao “is getting out [of prison] by the end of 2025” in September of 2025, but there’s been no confirmation of his release, nor any activity on any of his social media accounts.

It could be that Bitfinex and Tether executives are looking to keep a shareholder appeased by allowing him to cash out whatever CNH₮ is still under his control once he’s released.

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Questions about Tether and the US government

Although Tether has gotten the boot from China in regard to both issuing Yuan-pegged cryptocurrencies and the usage of its far more popular dollar-pegged stablecoin, the US government hasn’t bothered to investigate or attempt to hinder the stablecoin issuer for years.

A Department of Justice investigation was ongoing but has presumably died off with no action ever taken.

Meanwhile, having Howard Lutnick, who purchased US Treasuries for Tether when he was leading Cantor Fitzgerald, in charge of the Department of Commerce has all but ensured that Tether will never face any prosecution or proper audits.

China’s strict rules and regulations stand in stark contrast to the US, which has allowed Tether to issue over $180 billion worth of its stablecoin in a dollar denomination without any oversight whatsoever.

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Protos reached out to Tether for comment and is yet to hear back. If Tether responds the article will be updated.

Got a tip? Send us an email securely via Protos Leaks. For more informed news and investigations, follow us on XBluesky, and Google News, or subscribe to our YouTube channel.

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Crypto World

Strategy Buys 1,031 Bitcoin Using MSTR Stock Sales

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Strategy Buys 1,031 Bitcoin Using MSTR Stock Sales

Michael Saylor’s Strategy, the world’s largest public holder of Bitcoin (BTC), bought another 1,031 Bitcoin last week in a much smaller purchase than its previous two weekly buys, funding the acquisition with sales of Class A common stock.

Strategy acquired 1,031 Bitcoin for $76.6 million last week, according to an 8-K filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday.

The purchases were made at an average price of $74,326 per coin, below the company’s overall average acquisition price of $75,694. Bitcoin averaged around $70,871 for the week of March 16-22, based on daily closing prices.

The new acquisitions bring Strategy’s holdings to 762,099 BTC, acquired for a total cost of roughly $57.69 billion, the company said.

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Source: SEC

Common stock funded the latest buy

Strategy’s relatively modest purchase follows larger Bitcoin acquisitions recently, including a 22,337 BTC buy reported last Monday and a 17,994 BTC buy a week earlier.

The 22,337 BTC ($1.6 billion) purchase ranks among Strategy’s largest on record and was largely funded through sales of its perpetual preferred equity, Stretch (STRC). The stock generated approximately $1.2 billion, accounting for about 75% of the total purchase.

Related: Strategy records biggest STRC issuance day with estimated 1,420 BTC buy

Unlike the prior week’s funding mix, the latest purchase appears to have been funded through sales of Strategy’s Class A common stock rather than preferred equity.

Source: SEC

Strategy has bought 41,362 Bitcoin for around $2.93 billion in March. With Bitcoin trading at $70,430 at the time of writing, the company is down around 7% on its BTC holdings, now worth around $54 billion, according to data from CoinGecko.

Related: Strategy halts Bitcoin buying via STRC: Will BTC price dip again?

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Strategy’s holdings are roughly 3% below the Bitcoin holdings of BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT), which held about 785,300 BTC on behalf of its clients after the close of trading on Friday.

US spot Bitcoin ETFs collectively held nearly 1.3 million BTC as of March 20, representing roughly 6.1% of the 21 million maximum Bitcoin supply, according to data from WalletPilot.

Magazine: Metaplanet’s Japan Bitcoin bet, Bithumb ordered suspension: Asia Express