Polymarket traders estimate the chance that China will legalize the purchase of Bitcoin within the country to be around 5%.
At first glance, this number seems negative. Still, the question arises whether the Chinese government will explicitly allow its citizens to exchange RMB for Bitcoin within mainland China by the end of 2026.
This distinction is important because the regulatory structure recently completed by the Chinese government points in the opposite direction.
Prediction markets ask binary questions. Will the People’s Republic of China announce that by December 31, 2026, Chinese citizens will be able to legally purchase Bitcoin with Renminbi within China?
This resolution hinges on the announcement itself, not its implementation. Hong Kong sandboxes, offshore products, and institutional workarounds are excluded. This is a test of land banking rails and legal purchasing channels, the very infrastructure that China has spent the last year systematically dismantling.
The ban has been further strengthened
In February 2026, Chinese regulators issued a comprehensive joint notification that effectively codified “Ban 2.0.” This document reaffirms that virtual currency business activities amount to illegal financial activities and that virtual currencies do not have the status of legal tender.
However, it goes beyond the September 2021 framework it replaces and specifically targets the naming and registration of entities that support marketing, transportation facilitation, payment settlement, and even cryptocurrency activities.
The notice singles out stablecoins as a priority enforcement area, bans unauthorized offshore issuance of renminbi-pegged stablecoins, and frames stablecoins as a vehicle for anti-money laundering gaps, fraud, and unauthorized cross-border fund transfers.
Civil deterrence has also been introduced. Investing in virtual currencies and related products violates “public order and morals” and such transactions are legally void and impose personal losses on investors.
This was not a campaign memo. The 2021 Notification has been repealed and established as a new legal standard. For those betting on a reversal by the end of the year, the timeline will look grim.
| policy layer | What is it (plain English) | Does this satisfy the polymarket “YES”? | Situation on the mainland (framework after February 2026) | Hong Kong’s “pressure valve”? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domestic retail purchase (RMB → BTC) | Ordinary people can legally exchange RMB into Bitcoin Within mainland China (via legal apps/exchanges/OTC). | yes | Prohibited | no — Hong Kong does not change the legality of onshore RMB → BTC purchases on the mainland. |
| Exchange/trading venue (domestic license) | Chinese licensed cryptocurrency exchanges and exchanges operate legally and can provide services to mainland residents. | no | Prohibited/targeted | yes — Hong Kong can obtain VASP/venue licenses, but this remains offshore and does not legalize venues on the mainland. |
| Banking rail (renminbi deposit/settlement) | Banks/payment companies can provide RMB accounts, deposits and withdrawals, and settlement/clearing for virtual currency-related transactions. | No (unless you explicitly enable onshore legal RMB → BTC purchases) | Target/Prohibition (Focus on rails and facilitation) | partial — Hong Kong Bank Rail can support licensed Hong Kong activities. Not reopening the RMB rail for mainland virtual currency transactions. |
| Storage/brokerage products | Regulated entities can store BTC for their customers or provide brokered BTC exposure (funds, structured notes, wrappers). | no | Prohibited (It will be treated as “virtual currency related products and activities”) | yes — Hong Kong can host regulated products (ETFs/custody etc.) within a contained jurisdiction. |
| Legality of mining | Mining is legal/regulated (licenses, taxes, access to the power grid), not prohibited/penalized. | no | Prohibited (No accommodations available. Enforcement may vary by region) | no — Hong Kong is not a mining center. Mining is not legalized on the mainland. |
| Hong Kong Access (ETF/Stablecoin) | Exposure via the Hong Kong Spot Crypto ETF. Stablecoin based on Hong Kong license. Tokenization pilot based on Hong Kong regulations. | no (Explicitly excluded by the “inside China” framework of the market) | not applicable To mainland legality. Mainland restrictions still apply | yes — ETF + stablecoin license + supervised pilot will serve as an offshore experiment without mainland liberalization. |
| Offshore institutional workarounds | Offshore exchanges/commodities/institutions offer BTC exposure. Mainland users access via VPN/OTC/cross-border channels. | no | Target/Prohibition (Especially solicitation/marketing/transport facilitation and cross-border capital flow vectors) | partial — Hong Kong can accept products, but “mainland access” remains politically restricted and does not meet land-based purchasing criteria. |
Hong Kong as a control experiment
The Chinese government’s approach to cryptocurrencies becomes clearer when viewed through the lens of Hong Kong’s role as a regulatory laboratory.
In April 2024, Hong Kong launched Asia’s first Bitcoin and Ethereum spot ETF, marketed explicitly as a product for jurisdictions where mainland trading remains prohibited.
The city’s stablecoin licensing framework took effect in August 2025, but as of early 2026, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s register showed zero license issuers.
The first batch is expected in March 2026, but regulators have suggested that number will be “very small”.
Even ocean experiments face political constraints. The Financial Times reported that Chinese tech giants including Ant Group and Jingtocom have canceled plans for a Hong Kong stablecoin following the intervention of the Chinese government.
The message: Innovation can occur in controlled environments, but only if central oversight is enhanced rather than circumvented.
This structure allows the Chinese government to maintain an impermeable barrier to domestic renminbi-to-bitcoin exchange while allowing the use of contained pilots such as ETFs, tokenization frameworks, and licensed stablecoins.
Hong Kong acts as a pressure valve and does not foretell mainland policy.

The tokenization paradox
China’s February 2026 regulatory tightening also makes it clear that digital assets will be allowed where they are allowed: within heavily monitored and permitted tokenization lanes.
On February 6, the China Securities Regulatory Commission strengthened its supervision of offshore tokenized asset-backed securities tied to onshore assets, calling for stronger filings, disclosures, and cross-border coordination.
On the same day, a notice from the People’s Bank of China combined a crackdown on cryptocurrencies with language stating that tokenized products backed by domestic assets would be subject to strict scrutiny.
Three days later, Reuters framed the move to establish a legal pathway for offshore issuance of tokens backed by mainland assets, even though real-world asset issuance within the country remains prohibited.
This interpretation is consistent with the broader stance of the Chinese government. Digital finance is acceptable if it is auditable, supervised by the state, and goes through approved entities. There are no unregulated transactions.
McKinsey predicts that by 2030, the market capitalization of tokenized assets will be around $2 trillion, with a bullish case excluding “cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin” at around $4 trillion.
Because tokenization is linked to state surveillance and control infrastructure, the Chinese government can actively promote tokenization and conduct anti-Bitcoin transactions at the same time.
One data point complicates the tightening story. According to Hashrate Index, China’s share of Bitcoin mining will recover to around 14% by October 2025, with some industry estimates putting it between 15% and 20% of global mining.
This resurgence has occurred despite a mining ban, suggesting gaps in enforcement at the local level.
However, this move reflects fluctuations in compliance rather than a reversal of policy. Local tolerance for underground mining has not translated into legal clarity at the national level, and the Chinese government’s February 2026 notification shows no consideration for mining activities.
Actual price at odds of 5%
Polymarket’s current pricing reflects a series of low-probability scenarios.
The most plausible path to a “yes” resolution involves a narrow land test. It is a state-supervised platform in a free trade zone that allows limited RMB to Bitcoin purchases, subject to strict capital caps and customer visibility controls.
Such experiments will require clear licensing pathways, access to banking services, and a shift away from “illicit financial activities.”
There is nothing in the current regulatory environment to suggest movement towards that outcome. The February 2026 framework reverses the Overton framework, treating crypto businesses not as a gray area that should be tolerated, but as illegal activity that should be eradicated.
A second scenario, indirect Bitcoin exposure through highly regulated products, could gain traction, such as mainland investors accessing Hong Kong crypto ETFs through approved channels.
However, this does not meet the resolution standards for polymarkets. This criterion is subject to legal onshore RMB to Bitcoin purchases.
Sovereign Lens and Signals Worth Noting
Beijing’s hardline stance is also consistent with broader concerns about monetary sovereignty.
In 2025, the Bank for International Settlements noted that more than 99% of stablecoins are denominated in US dollars, raising concerns about stealth dollarization and circumvention of capital controls, the very vulnerabilities that Chinese regulators cite when justifying crypto regulations.
For a government that believes capital controls are essential to macroeconomic stability, allowing unregulated renminbi to bitcoin exchange is tantamount to opening a permanent leak in the dam.
The political cost of such a reversal would seem prohibitive, especially in the absence of a crisis that forces Beijing’s hand.
If the odds are to move meaningfully, certain triggers will occur prior to the change. A formal statement from the State Council or the People’s Bank of China establishing legal channels for licensed exchanges and brokers to operate in the country would be the clearest signal.
Another possibility would be banking permission to allow crypto platform transactions to be settled with RMB accounts. A change in the wording of the official notification from “illegal financial activity” to “regulated activity” would indicate a conceptual restructuring.
The announcement of a free trade zone that explicitly allows the purchase of RMB with Bitcoin within a designated geographic area could meet polymarket payment criteria without requiring nationwide legalization. None of these signals are present.
The regulatory trajectory from late 2025 onwards is unidirectional with tighter controls, clearer prohibitions, and clearer civil and criminal deterrence.
real bet
Polymarket traders have not priced in whether China will “accept cryptocurrencies” or “become blockchain friendly.” They are pricing in the possibility that within a year, the Chinese government will withdraw its newly strengthened policy framework, allowing citizens to exchange national currency for assets the government deems illegal, and do so without any political or economic catalyst.
Instead, the Chinese government has created a bifurcated system. That means digital finance allowed under state supervision and a continued ban on decentralized transactions.
Hong Kong can host the experiment. Tokenization can proceed on controlled rails. Stablecoins can be licensed under strict conditions. However, domestic RMB-to-Bitcoin purchases remain at odds with the regulatory logic that China has tightened its legal framework for by 2025 and early 2026.
Architecture is not ambiguous. It is explicit, codified, and expansive. Betting on a reversal by December 2026 is not only betting on current policy, but also on the framework China has just finished building.
(Tag translation) Bitcoin

